Re: For review: seccomp_user_notif(2) manual page
From: Sargun Dhillon
Date: Wed Oct 28 2020 - 19:36:57 EST
On Tue, Oct 27, 2020 at 3:28 AM Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Oct 27, 2020 at 7:14 AM Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
> <mtk.manpages@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On 10/26/20 4:54 PM, Jann Horn wrote:
> > > I'm a bit on the fence now on whether non-blocking mode should use
> > > ENOTCONN or not... I guess if we returned ENOENT even when there are
> > > no more listeners, you'd have to disambiguate through the poll()
> > > revents, which would be kinda ugly?
> >
> > I must confess, I'm not quite clear on which two cases you
> > are trying to distinguish. Can you elaborate?
>
> Let's say someone writes a program whose responsibilities are just to
> handle seccomp events and to listen on some other fd for commands. And
> this is implemented with an event loop. Then once all the target
> processes are gone (including zombie reaping), we'll start getting
> EPOLLERR.
>
> If NOTIF_RECV starts returning -ENOTCONN at this point, the event loop
> can just call into the seccomp logic without any arguments; it can
> just call NOTIF_RECV one more time, see the -ENOTCONN, and terminate.
> The downside is that there's one more error code userspace has to
> special-case.
> This would be more consistent with what we'd be doing in the blocking case.
>
> If NOTIF_RECV keeps returning -ENOENT, the event loop has to also tell
> the seccomp logic what the revents are.
>
> I guess it probably doesn't really matter much.
So, in practice, if you're emulating a blocking syscall (such as open,
perf_event_open, or any of a number of other syscalls), you probably
have to do it on a separate thread in the supervisor because you want
to continue to be able to receive new notifications if any other process
generates a seccomp notification event that you need to handle.
In addition to that, some of these syscalls are preemptible, so you need
to poll SECCOMP_IOCTL_NOTIF_ID_VALID to make sure that the program
under supervision hasn't left the syscall.
If we're to implement a mechanism that makes the seccomp ioctl receive
non-blocking, it would be valuable to address this problem as well (getting
a notification when the supervisor is processing a syscall and needs to
preempt it). In the best case, this can be a minor inconvenience, and
in the worst case this can result in weird errors where you're keeping
resources open that the container expects to be closed.