Re: [PATCH] scsi: Silence unnecessary warnings about ioctl to partition
From: Paolo Bonzini
Date: Wed May 02 2012 - 11:50:32 EST
Il 02/05/2012 17:10, Alan Cox ha scritto:
>>> Also I tend to side with Alan that I don't quite see
>>> the point in trying to restrict CAP_SYS_RAWIO threads and thus breaking the
>>> compatibility
>>
>> For example, we have a customer that wants this:
>>
>> * a VM should be able to send vendor-specific commands to a disk via
>> SG_IO (vendor-specific commands require CAP_SYS_RAWIO).
>>
>> * they want to assign logical volumes or partitions to the same VM
>> without letting it read or write outside the logical volume or partition.
>
> And if the process has CAP_SYS_RAWIO it can do it anyway.
How so? Assuming /dev/sdb is not accessible, /dev/sdb1 is accessible,
and no iopl/ioperm.
> Or you could just do the special case ioctl magic out of band in the apps.
You mentioned crass/gross hacks. Forcing apps to detect if you're
targeting a partition or a block device _is_ gross.
> It's hardly an ultra performance critical path for the SG_IO cases.
That I agree with.
>> Of course a better solution for this would be customizable filters for
>> SG_IO commands, where a privileged application would open the block
>> device with CAP_SYS_RAWIO, set the filter and hand the file descriptor
>> to QEMU. Or alternatively some extension of the device cgroup. But
>> either solution would require a large amount of work.
>
> Customisable filters are not hard. We've got all the filtering code in
> kernel and the ability to verify filters, even the ability to JIT them.
> Just support adding/removing/running a BPF filter on the channel in
> question.
>
> So it shouldn't be much code to do what you want.
Yes, it's not much code if I don't get into cgroups land and stick with
a ioctl to add and remove BPF filters that look at CDBs. One downside
is that such filtering would likely be enabled by CAP_SYS_RAWIO.
Because of this, tweaking the filter on the fly is still not too easy
because I want to run as unprivileged as possible. I guess some
privileged helper program can set the filter and send me back the file
descriptor via SCM_RIGHTS. The filter will be preserved across that, right?
I still believe this is suboptimal in the general case, and that Jan's
customer has a bug. But hey I would have ended up implementing the
filters anyway sooner or later, so I'd rather avoid further flames and
work on them with someone supporting the idea. :) Reluctantly
Acked-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@xxxxxxxxxx>
Paolo
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