[RFC PATCH v1 0/3] security/x86/sgx: SGX specific LSM hooks
Jarkko Sakkinen
jarkko.sakkinen at linux.intel.com
Mon Jun 10 17:36:45 UTC 2019
On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 12:03:03AM -0700, Cedric Xing wrote:
> This series intends to make the new SGX subsystem and the existing LSM
> architecture work together smoothly so that, say, SGX cannot be abused to work
> around restrictions set forth by LSM. This series applies on top of Jarkko
> Sakkinen's SGX series v20 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/4/17/344), where abundant
> details of this SGX/LSM problem could be found.
>
> This series is an alternative to Sean Christopherson's recent RFC series
> (https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/6/5/1070) that was trying to solve the same
> problem. The key problem is for LSM to determine the "maximal (most permissive)
> protection" allowed for individual enclave pages. Sean's approach is to take
> that from user mode code as a parameter of the EADD ioctl, validate it with LSM
> ahead of time, and then enforce it inside the SGX subsystem. The major
> disadvantage IMHO is that a priori knowledge of "maximal protection" is needed,
> but it isn't always available in certain use cases. In fact, it is an unusual
> approach to take "maximal protection" from user code, as what SELinux is doing
> today is to determine "maximal protection" of a vma using attributes associated
> with vma->vm_file instead. When it comes to enclaves, vma->vm_file always
> points /dev/sgx/enclave, so what's missing is a new way for LSM modules to
> remember origins of enclave pages so that they don't solely depend on
> vma->vm_file to determine "maximal protection".
>
> This series takes advantage of the fact that enclave pages cannot be remapped
> (to different linear address), therefore the pair of { vma->vm_file,
> linear_address } can be used to uniquely identify an enclave page. Then by
> notifying LSM on creation of every enclave page (via a new LSM hook -
> security_enclave_load), LSM modules would be able to track origin and
> protection changes of every page, hence be able to judge correctly upon
> mmap/mprotect requests.
>
> Cedric Xing (3):
> LSM/x86/sgx: Add SGX specific LSM hooks
> LSM/x86/sgx: Implement SGX specific hooks in SELinux
> LSM/x86/sgx: Call new LSM hooks from SGX subsystem
A patch set containing direct LSM changes should consider all LSMs.
This will allow all the LSM maintainers to consider the changes. Now we
have a limited audience and we are favoring one LSM.
There is no good reason why direct LSM changes cannot be done
post-upstreaming like we do for virtualization.
Looking at Sean's patches, overally 1/5-3/5 make perfect sense.
/Jarkko
More information about the Linux-security-module-archive
mailing list