On Thu, Mar 12, 2020 at 12:38 AM Mickaël Salaün mic@digikod.net wrote:
On 10/03/2020 00:44, Jann Horn wrote:
On Mon, Feb 24, 2020 at 5:03 PM Mickaël Salaün mic@digikod.net wrote:
This new version of Landlock is a major revamp of the previous series [1], hence the RFC tag. The three main changes are the replacement of eBPF with a dedicated safe management of access rules, the replacement of the use of seccomp(2) with a dedicated syscall, and the management of filesystem access-control (back from the v10).
As discussed in [2], eBPF may be too powerful and dangerous to be put in the hand of unprivileged and potentially malicious processes, especially because of side-channel attacks against access-controls or other parts of the kernel.
Thanks to this new implementation (1540 SLOC), designed from the ground to be used by unprivileged processes, this series enables a process to sandbox itself without requiring CAP_SYS_ADMIN, but only the no_new_privs constraint (like seccomp). Not relying on eBPF also enables to improve performances, especially for stacked security policies thanks to mergeable rulesets.
The compiled documentation is available here: https://landlock.io/linux-doc/landlock-v14/security/landlock/index.html
This series can be applied on top of v5.6-rc3. This can be tested with CONFIG_SECURITY_LANDLOCK and CONFIG_SAMPLE_LANDLOCK. This patch series can be found in a Git repository here: https://github.com/landlock-lsm/linux/commits/landlock-v14 I would really appreciate constructive comments on the design and the code.
I've looked through the patchset, and I think that it would be possible to simplify it quite a bit. I have tried to do that (and compiled-tested it, but not actually tried running it); here's what I came up with:
https://github.com/thejh/linux/commits/landlock-mod
The three modified patches (patches 1, 2 and 5) are marked with "[MODIFIED]" in their title. Please take a look - what do you think? Feel free to integrate my changes into your patches if you think they make sense.
Regarding the landlock_release_inodes(), the final wait_var_event() is indeed needed (as does fsnotify), but why do you use a READ_ONCE() for landlock_initialized?
Ah, good point - that READ_ONCE() should be unnecessary.
The other main change is about the object cross-reference: you entirely removed it, which means that an object will only be free when there are no rules using it. This does not free an object when its underlying object is being terminated. We now only have to worry about the termination of the parent of an underlying object (e.g. the super-block of an inode).
However, I think you forgot to increment object->usage in create_ruleset_elem().
Whoops, you're right.
There is also an unused checked_mask variable in merge_ruleset().
Oh, yeah, oops.
All this removes optimizations that made the code more difficult to understand. The performance difference is negligible, and I think that the memory footprint is fine. These optimizations (and others) could be discussed later. I'm integrating most of your changes in the next patch series.
:)
Aside from those things, there is also a major correctness issue where I'm not sure how to solve it properly:
Let's say a process installs a filter on itself like this:
struct landlock_attr_ruleset ruleset = { .handled_access_fs = ACCESS_FS_ROUGHLY_WRITE}; int ruleset_fd = landlock(LANDLOCK_CMD_CREATE_RULESET, LANDLOCK_OPT_CREATE_RULESET, sizeof(ruleset), &ruleset); struct landlock_attr_path_beneath path_beneath = { .ruleset_fd = ruleset_fd, .allowed_access = ACCESS_FS_ROUGHLY_WRITE, .parent_fd = open("/tmp/foobar", O_PATH), }; landlock(LANDLOCK_CMD_ADD_RULE, LANDLOCK_OPT_ADD_RULE_PATH_BENEATH, sizeof(path_beneath), &path_beneath); prctl(PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS, 1, 0, 0, 0); struct landlock_attr_enforce attr_enforce = { .ruleset_fd = ruleset_fd }; landlock(LANDLOCK_CMD_ENFORCE_RULESET, LANDLOCK_OPT_ENFORCE_RULESET, sizeof(attr_enforce), &attr_enforce);
At this point, the process is not supposed to be able to write to anything outside /tmp/foobar, right? But what happens if the process does the following next?
struct landlock_attr_ruleset ruleset = { .handled_access_fs = ACCESS_FS_ROUGHLY_WRITE}; int ruleset_fd = landlock(LANDLOCK_CMD_CREATE_RULESET, LANDLOCK_OPT_CREATE_RULESET, sizeof(ruleset), &ruleset); struct landlock_attr_path_beneath path_beneath = { .ruleset_fd = ruleset_fd, .allowed_access = ACCESS_FS_ROUGHLY_WRITE, .parent_fd = open("/", O_PATH), }; landlock(LANDLOCK_CMD_ADD_RULE, LANDLOCK_OPT_ADD_RULE_PATH_BENEATH, sizeof(path_beneath), &path_beneath); prctl(PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS, 1, 0, 0, 0); struct landlock_attr_enforce attr_enforce = { .ruleset_fd = ruleset_fd }; landlock(LANDLOCK_CMD_ENFORCE_RULESET, LANDLOCK_OPT_ENFORCE_RULESET, sizeof(attr_enforce), &attr_enforce);
As far as I can tell from looking at the source, after this, you will have write access to the entire filesystem again. I think the idea is that LANDLOCK_CMD_ENFORCE_RULESET should only let you drop privileges, not increase them, right?
There is an additionnal check in syscall.c:get_path_from_fd(): it is forbidden to add a rule with a path which is not accessible (according to LANDLOCK_ACCESS_FS_OPEN) thanks to a call to security_file_open(), but this is definitely not perfect.
Ah, I missed that.
I think the easy way to fix this would be to add a bitmask to each rule that says from which ruleset it originally comes, and then let check_access_path() collect these bitmasks from each rule with OR, and check at the end whether the resulting bitmask is full - if not, at least one of the rulesets did not permit the access, and it should be denied.
But maybe it would make more sense to change how the API works instead, and get rid of the concept of "merging" two rulesets together? Instead, we could make the API work like this:
- LANDLOCK_CMD_CREATE_RULESET gives you a file descriptor whose
->private_data contains a pointer to the old ruleset of the process, as well as a pointer to a new empty ruleset.
- LANDLOCK_CMD_ADD_RULE fails if the specified rule would not be
permitted by the old ruleset, then adds the rule to the new ruleset
- LANDLOCK_CMD_ENFORCE_RULESET fails if the old ruleset pointer in
->private_data doesn't match the current ruleset of the process, then replaces the old ruleset with the new ruleset.
With this, the new ruleset is guaranteed to be a subset of the old ruleset because each of the new ruleset's rules is permitted by the old ruleset. (Unless the directory hierarchy rotates, but in that case the inaccuracy isn't much worse than what would've been possible through RCU path walk anyway AFAIK.)
What do you think?
I would prefer to add the same checks you described at first (with check_access_path), but only when creating a new ruleset with merge_ruleset() (which should probably be renamed). This enables not to rely on a parent ruleset/domain until the enforcement, which is the case anyway. Unfortunately this doesn't work for some cases with bind mounts. Because check_access_path() goes through one path, another (bind mounted) path could be illegitimately allowed.
Hmm... I'm not sure what you mean. At the moment, landlock doesn't allow any sandboxed process to change the mount hierarchy, right? Can you give an example where this would go wrong?
That makes the problem a bit more complicated. A solution may be to keep track of the hierarchy of each rule (e.g. with a layer/depth number), and only allow an access request if at least a rule of each layer allow this access. In this case we also need to correctly handle the case when rules from different layers are tied to the same object.