Re: [malware-list] [RFC 0/5] [TALPA] Intro to alinuxinterfaceforonaccess scanning

From: david
Date: Sun Aug 17 2008 - 19:25:02 EST


On Mon, 18 Aug 2008, Pavel Machek wrote:

And I still don't get this 'mmap problem' that I don't solve that
libmalware magically solves. What? don't use mmap? I certainly hope
not.

Don't use mmap, it is as simple as that. AFAICS mmap(MAP_SHARED) --
which is basically shared memory -- is fundamentally incompatible with
reliable virus scanning.

...or do you have a reasonable solution for mmap?


mmap has a few different problems

1. intercepting reads and writes to take action at that time

2. the fact that two programs can use it as an inter-process communication
mechanism.

...can and will use it as an IPC. So we need to modify some
applications.

Rather than modify all the applications using mmap (you can't tell if
the other side is going to use it for shared memory... right?), we
could simply modify all the Windows-facing applications using mmap.

if you are worried about the IPC aspects, all you can do is forbid it,

Can you automatically tell if applications are using mmap for IPC?

no, but can you tell at the time of the mmap command if anyone has it opened for writing? if you can then you can just not allow the mmap in thid case (policy decision by userspace, as such it can try to look at what other programs are accessing it via mmap to decide if it should allow it or not)

BTW in another mail you wanted to include /var/log/syslog from
scanning. You should not be doing that if syslog is exported to
Windows systems. Of course, you can get away with scanning syslog when
Windows client tries to read it, which should be acceptable...

I listed that as an example of what I would consider a sane policy. by doing the checking is a userspace library different binaries can be linked against different libraries by the sysadmin/distro to decide which ones need to do what checking. there's nothing inherent in the mechanism that foces the policy in any direction.

David Lang
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