Hi Stefan,
On Tue, Jun 13, 2017 at 11:47:26AM -0400, Stefan Berger wrote:
On 05/08/2017 02:11 PM, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:One disadvantage of this approach is that whoever is setting up the
Root in a non-initial user ns cannot be trusted to write a traditionalHi Serge,
security.capability xattr. If it were allowed to do so, then any
unprivileged user on the host could map his own uid to root in a private
namespace, write the xattr, and execute the file with privilege on the
host.
However supporting file capabilities in a user namespace is very
desirable. Not doing so means that any programs designed to run with
limited privilege must continue to support other methods of gaining and
dropping privilege. For instance a program installer must detect
whether file capabilities can be assigned, and assign them if so but set
setuid-root otherwise. The program in turn must know how to drop
partial capabilities, and do so only if setuid-root.
I have been looking at patch below primarily to learn how we could apply a
similar technique to security.ima and security.evm for a namespaced IMA.
From the paragraphs above I thought that you solved the problem of a shared
filesystem where one now can write different security.capability xattrs by
effectively supporting for example security.capability[uid=1000] and
security.capability[uid=2000] written into the filesystem. Each would then
become visible as security.capability if the userns mapping is set
appropriately.
container would need to go touch the security.ima attribute for each
file in the contianer, which would slow down container creation time.
For capabilities this makes sense, because you might want the file to
have different capabilities in different namespaces, but for IMA,
since the file hash will be the same in every namespace, it would be
nice to use a design that avoids touching each file on new ns
creation.
Cheers,
Tycho