Re: [RFC] Restrict the untrusted devices, to bind to only a set of "whitelisted" drivers
From: Pavel Machek
Date: Wed Jul 01 2020 - 07:08:19 EST
Hi!
> > > Yes, it originally was designed that way, but again, the world has
> > > changed so we have to change with it. That is why USB has for a long
> > > time now, allowed you to not bind drivers to devices that you do not
> > > "trust", and that trust can be determined by userspace. That all came
> > > about thanks to the work done by the wireless USB spec people and kernel
> > > authors, which showed that maybe you just don't want to trust any device
> > > that comes within range of your system :)
> >
> > Again, not disagreeing; but note the scale here.
> >
> > It is mandatory to defend against malicious wireless USB devices.
>
> Turns out there are no more wireless USB devices in the world, and the
> code for that is gone from Linux :)
>
> > We probably should work on robustness against malicious USB devices.
>
> We are, and do have, that support today.
>
> > Malicious PCI-express devices are lot less of concern.
>
> Not really, they are a lot of concern to some people. Valid attacks are
> out there today, see the thunderbolt attacks that numerous people have
> done and published recently and for many years.
In this case PCI-express meant internal cards in PCs. Yes, thunderbolt
would be higher concern than internal card.
> > Defending against malicious CPU/RAM does not make much sense.
>
> That's what the spectre and rowhammer fixes have been for :)
Yeah, and that's why we have whitelist of working CPUs and only work
on those, riiight? :-). [There's difference between "malicious" and
"buggy".]
Pavel
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