Re: [PATCH v3 resend 1/2] mm: Add an F_SEAL_FUTURE_WRITE seal to memfd
From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Fri Nov 09 2018 - 18:14:08 EST
> On Nov 9, 2018, at 2:42 PM, Daniel Colascione <dancol@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Nov 9, 2018 at 2:37 PM, Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> Another, more general fix might be to prevent /proc/pid/fd/N opens
>>> from "upgrading" access modes. But that'd be a bigger ABI break.
>>
>> I think we should fix that, too. I consider it a bug fix, not an ABI break, personally.
>
> Someone, somewhere is probably relying on it though, and that means
> that we probably can't change it unless it's actually causing
> problems.
>
> <mumble>spacebar heating</mumble>
I think it has caused problems in the past. Itâs certainly extremely surprising behavior. Iâd say it should be fixed and, if needed, a sysctl to unfix it might be okay.
>
>>>> That aside: I wonder whether a better API would be something that
>>>> allows you to create a new readonly file descriptor, instead of
>>>> fiddling with the writability of an existing fd.
>>>
>>> That doesn't work, unfortunately. The ashmem API we're replacing with
>>> memfd requires file descriptor continuity. I also looked into opening
>>> a new FD and dup2(2)ing atop the old one, but this approach doesn't
>>> work in the case that the old FD has already leaked to some other
>>> context (e.g., another dup, SCM_RIGHTS). See
>>> https://developer.android.com/ndk/reference/group/memory. We can't
>>> break ASharedMemory_setProt.
>>
>>
>> Hmm. If we fix the general reopen bug, a way to drop write access from an existing struct file would do what Android needs, right? I donât know if there are general VFS issues with that.
>
> I also proposed that. :-) Maybe it'd work best as a special case of
> the perennial revoke(2) that people keep proposing. You'd be able to
> selectively revoke all access or just write access.
Sounds good to me, modulo possible races, but that shouldnât be too hard to deal with.