Re: [RFC 1/1] seccomp: Add bitmask of allowed system calls.

From: Frederic Weisbecker
Date: Thu May 07 2009 - 19:00:37 EST


On Thu, May 07, 2009 at 03:34:58PM -0700, Adam Langley wrote:
> > That assessment is incorrect, there's no difference between safety
> > here really.
> >
> > LSM cannot magically inspect user-space memory either when multiple
> > threads may access it. The point would be to define filters for
> > system call _arguments_, which are inherently thread-local and safe.
>
> If I hook security_operations.socket_connect, I can validate the struct
> sockaddr after the final copy_from_user. However, since the sockaddr lives in
> userspace memory, if I try and validate it from ftrace SYSCALL_ENTER, I can't
> know that it won't change before sys_connect reads it again.
>
> Because of that, there are system calls which an LSM hook can safely accept
> that an ftrace hook cannot. However, as you point out, any arguments passed in
> registers are inheriently safe and these may be sufficiently powerful.
>
> > There are two problems with the bitmap scheme, which i also
> > suggested in a previous thread but then found it to be lacking:
> >
> > 1) enumeration: you define a bitmap. That will be problematic
> >   between compat and native 64-bit (both have different syscall
> >   vectors).
>
> I /think/ it works out, but I've been bitten before with subtle 32/64 bit
> compat issues and accept that it's a bit ugly.
>
> > 2) flexibility. It's an on/off selection per syscall. With the
> >   filter we have on, off, or filtered. That's a _whole_ lot more
> >   flexible.
>
> Absolutely.
>
> Is there a git tree that I can pull this parsing code from?
> (git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rostedt/linux-2.6-trace.git
> maybe?). I can patch in the seccomp-on-ftrace work and try building the
> filtering on top of that. I'll see how it turns out anyway.


Hi,

The most uptodate one is:
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/linux-2.6-tip.git
on the tracing/filters topic.

See kernel/trace/trace_events_filter.c

You might want to reuse some current syscall tracing facility.
An automated resolution table is built on bootime, you can look
at the end of arch/x86/kernel/ftrace.c

This table links each syscalls nr to the matching attribute entry of syscall
in which you can find:

- parameters names
- parameters types
- syscall name

You can look at the hooks in include/linux/syscall.h:
The sections inside
#ifdef CONFIG_FTRACE_SYSCALLS

Well, it's a bit insane to read, so you can also look
at include/trace/syscall.h and kernel/trace/trace_syscalls.c and
see how it is used and how it could be reused.


Thanks,
Frederic.

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