Re: [RFC PATCH v1 0/8] Introduce mseal() syscall

From: Pedro Falcato
Date: Tue Oct 17 2023 - 11:30:15 EST


On Mon, Oct 16, 2023 at 4:18 PM Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Oct 16, 2023 at 02:38:19PM +0000, jeffxu@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> > Modern CPUs support memory permissions such as RW and NX bits. Linux has
> > supported NX since the release of kernel version 2.6.8 in August 2004 [1].
>
> This seems like a confusing way to introduce the subject. Here, you're
> talking about page permissions, whereas (as far as I can tell), mseal() is
> about making _virtual_ addresses immutable, for some value of immutable.
>
> > Memory sealing additionally protects the mapping itself against
> > modifications. This is useful to mitigate memory corruption issues where
> > a corrupted pointer is passed to a memory management syscall. For example,
> > such an attacker primitive can break control-flow integrity guarantees
> > since read-only memory that is supposed to be trusted can become writable
> > or .text pages can get remapped. Memory sealing can automatically be
> > applied by the runtime loader to seal .text and .rodata pages and
> > applications can additionally seal security critical data at runtime.
> > A similar feature already exists in the XNU kernel with the
> > VM_FLAGS_PERMANENT [3] flag and on OpenBSD with the mimmutable syscall [4].
> > Also, Chrome wants to adopt this feature for their CFI work [2] and this
> > patchset has been designed to be compatible with the Chrome use case.
>
> This [2] seems very generic and wide-ranging, not helpful. [5] was more
> useful to understand what you're trying to do.
>
> > The new mseal() is an architecture independent syscall, and with
> > following signature:
> >
> > mseal(void addr, size_t len, unsigned int types, unsigned int flags)
> >
> > addr/len: memory range. Must be continuous/allocated memory, or else
> > mseal() will fail and no VMA is updated. For details on acceptable
> > arguments, please refer to comments in mseal.c. Those are also fully
> > covered by the selftest.
>
> Mmm. So when you say "continuous/allocated" what you really mean is
> "Must have contiguous VMAs" rather than "All pages in this range must
> be populated", yes?
>
> > types: bit mask to specify which syscall to seal, currently they are:
> > MM_SEAL_MSEAL 0x1
> > MM_SEAL_MPROTECT 0x2
> > MM_SEAL_MUNMAP 0x4
> > MM_SEAL_MMAP 0x8
> > MM_SEAL_MREMAP 0x10
>
> I don't understand why we want this level of granularity. The OpenBSD
> and XNU examples just say "This must be immutable*". For values of
> immutable that allow downgrading access (eg RW to RO or RX to RO),
> but not upgrading access (RW->RX, RO->*, RX->RW).
>
> > Each bit represents sealing for one specific syscall type, e.g.
> > MM_SEAL_MPROTECT will deny mprotect syscall. The consideration of bitmask
> > is that the API is extendable, i.e. when needed, the sealing can be
> > extended to madvise, mlock, etc. Backward compatibility is also easy.
>
> Honestly, it feels too flexible. Why not just two flags to mprotect()
> -- PROT_IMMUTABLE and PROT_DOWNGRADABLE. I can see a use for that --
> maybe for some things we want to be able to downgrade and for other
> things, we don't.

I think it's worth pointing out that this suggestion (with PROT_*)
could easily integrate with mmap() and as such allow for one-shot
mmap() + mseal().
If we consider the common case as 'addr = mmap(...); mseal(addr);', it
definitely sounds like a performance win as we halve the number of
syscalls for a sealed mapping. And if we trivially look at e.g OpenBSD
ld.so code, mmap() + mimmutable() and mprotect() + mimmutable() seem
like common patterns.

--
Pedro