On Sat, Oct 24, 2020 at 02:01:30PM +0300, Topi Miettinen wrote:
On 23.10.2020 12.02, Catalin Marinas wrote:
On Thu, Oct 22, 2020 at 01:02:18PM -0700, Kees Cook wrote:
Regardless, it makes sense to me to have the kernel load the executable[...]
itself with BTI enabled by default. I prefer gaining Catalin's suggested
patch[2]. :)
[2] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/20201022093104.GB1229@gaia/
I think I first heard the idea at Mark R ;).
It still needs glibc changes to avoid the mprotect(), or at least ignore
the error. Since this is an ABI change and we don't know which kernels
would have it backported, maybe better to still issue the mprotect() but
ignore the failure.
What about kernel adding an auxiliary vector as a flag to indicate that BTI
is supported and recommended by the kernel? Then dynamic loader could use
that to detect that a) the main executable is BTI protected and there's no
need to mprotect() it and b) PROT_BTI flag should be added to all PROT_EXEC
pages.
We could add a bit to AT_FLAGS, it's always been 0 for Linux.
In absence of the vector, the dynamic loader might choose to skip doing
PROT_BTI at all (since the main executable isn't protected anyway either, or
maybe even the kernel is up-to-date but it knows that it's not recommended
for some reason, or maybe the kernel is so ancient that it doesn't know
about BTI). Optionally it could still read the flag from ELF later (for
compatibility with old kernels) and then do the mprotect() dance, which may
trip seccomp filters, possibly fatally.
I think the safest is for the dynamic loader to issue an mprotect() and
ignore the EPERM error. Not all user deployments have this seccomp
filter, so they can still benefit, and user can't tell whether the
kernel change has been backported.
Now, if the dynamic loader silently ignores the mprotect() failure on
the main executable, is there much value in exposing a flag in the aux
vectors? It saves a few (one?) mprotect() calls but I don't think it
matters much. Anyway, I don't mind the flag.