Re: [PATCH v3 1/6] rtnetlink: allow RTM_SETLINK to reference other namespaces

From: Jonas Bonn
Date: Sat Nov 09 2019 - 09:17:21 EST


Hi Mahesh,

Thanks for the detailed response. It provided valuable insight.

On 08/11/2019 19:55, Mahesh Bandewar (àààà ààààààà) wrote:
Hi Jonas, thanks for the response.

On Fri, Nov 8, 2019 at 12:20 AM Jonas Bonn <jonas@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Mahesh,

On 07/11/2019 21:36, Mahesh Bandewar (àààà ààààààà) wrote:
On Thu, Nov 7, 2019 at 5:30 AM Jonas Bonn <jonas@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


+ /* A hack to preserve kernel<->userspace interface.
+ * It was previously allowed to pass the IFLA_TARGET_NETNSID
+ * attribute as a way to _set_ the network namespace. In this
+ * case, the device interface was assumed to be in the _current_
+ * namespace.
+ * If the device cannot be found in the target namespace then we
+ * assume that the request is to set the device in the current
+ * namespace and thus we attempt to find the device there.
+ */
Could this bypasses the ns_capable() check? i.e. if the target is
"foo" but your current ns is bar. The process may be "capable" is foo
but the interface is not found in foo but present in bar and ends up
modifying it (especially when you are not capable in bar)?

I don't think so. There was never any capable-check for the "current"
namespace so there's no change in that regard.

I was wrong on this point. There IS a capable-check for the "current" net. The code to create interfaces in 'other' namespaces was already in place before my patch and that code does the right thing with respect to checking NS capabilities on the "destination" and "link" nets.

My patch is mostly just accounting for the "setlink" aspect of NEWLINK where the device already exists in a foreign namespace and needs to be searched for there. Even in that code path, all the ns-capable checks are in place and the behaviour is the same as before.


not having capable-check seems wrong as we don't want random
not-capable processes to alter settings. However, it may be at the API
entry level, which will provide necessary protection (haven't
checked!). Having said that, this could be bad for the stuff that you
are implementing since I could be in "foo" and attempting to change
"bar". For this I must be capable in "bar" but the top-level capable
check will by default check me in "foo" as well which is not required
and could potentially block me from performing legal operation in
"bar".

Not saying this is a problem, but without having an implementation to
use this would be hard to try. You would most likely have a way to
verify this, so please check it.

The above shouldn't be an issue with the current implementation.


I do think there is an issue with this hack that I can't see any
workaround for. If the user specifies an interface (by name or index)
for another namespace that doesn't exist, there's a potential problem if
that name/index happens to exist in the "current" namespace. In that
case, one many end up inadvertently modifying the interface in the
current namespace. I don't see how to avoid that while maintaining the
backwards compatibility.

This could very well be the case always for single digit ifindex
values. (We recently suffered a local scare because of something very
similar).

My absolute preference would be to drop this compat-hack altogether.
iproute2 doesn't use a bare TARGET_NETNSID in this manner (for changing
namespaces) and I didn't find any other users by a quick search of other
prominent Netlink users: systemd, network-manager, connman. This
compat-hack is there for the _potential ab-user_ of the interface, not
for any known such.

what is forcing you keeping you keeping / implementing this hack? I
would also prefer simple solution without creating a potential problem
/ vulnerability (problem: potentially modifying unintended interface,
vulnerability: potentially allow changing without proper credentials;
both not proven but are possibilities) down the line. One possibility
is to drop the compatibility hack and keep it as a backup if something
breaks / someone complains.

OK, this would be my preference, too. If we can work on the assumption that this isn't actually providing compatibility for anybody in practice, then we can drop it. With that, the potential problem of inadvertently modifying the wrong device disappears. There's no problem of being able to access a namespace that one isn't capable in, but leaving a hole through which the user may end up doing something unexpected is pretty ugly.

I'll remove this and repost the series.

Thanks for your insight into this issue. It was helpful.

/Jonas