[PATCH 4/7] vfs: Add superblock notifications
Jann Horn
jannh at google.com
Wed May 29 14:16:10 UTC 2019
On Wed, May 29, 2019 at 2:58 PM David Howells <dhowells at redhat.com> wrote:
> Jann Horn <jannh at google.com> wrote:
> > It might make sense to require that the path points to the root inode
> > of the superblock? That way you wouldn't be able to do this on a bind
> > mount that exposes part of a shared filesystem to a container.
>
> Why prevent that? It doesn't prevent the container denizen from watching a
> bind mount that exposes the root of a shared filesystem into a container.
Well, yes, but if you expose the root of the shared filesystem to the
container, the container is probably meant to have a higher level of
access than if only a bind mount is exposed? But I don't know.
> It probably makes sense to permit the LSM to rule on whether a watch may be
> emplaced, however.
We should have some sort of reasonable policy outside of LSM code
though - the kernel should still be secure even if no LSMs are built
into it.
> > > + }
> > > + }
> > > + up_write(&s->s_umount);
> > > + if (ret < 0)
> > > + kfree(watch);
> > > + } else if (s->s_watchers) {
> >
> > This should probably have something like a READ_ONCE() for clarity?
>
> Note that I think I'll rearrange this to:
>
> } else {
> ret = -EBADSLT;
> if (s->s_watchers) {
> down_write(&s->s_umount);
> ret = remove_watch_from_object(s->s_watchers, wqueue,
> s->s_unique_id, false);
> up_write(&s->s_umount);
> }
> }
>
> I'm not sure READ_ONCE() is necessary, since s_watchers can only be
> instantiated once and the watch list then persists until the superblock is
> deactivated. Furthermore, by the time deactivate_locked_super() is called, we
> can't be calling sb_notify() on it as it's become inaccessible.
>
> So if we see s->s_watchers as non-NULL, we should not see anything different
> inside the lock. In fact, I should be able to rewrite the above to:
>
> } else {
> ret = -EBADSLT;
> wlist = s->s_watchers;
> if (wlist) {
> down_write(&s->s_umount);
> ret = remove_watch_from_object(wlist, wqueue,
> s->s_unique_id, false);
> up_write(&s->s_umount);
> }
> }
I'm extremely twitchy when it comes to code like this because AFAIK
gcc at least used to sometimes turn code that read a value from memory
and then used it multiple times into something with multiple memory
reads, leading to critical security vulnerabilities; see e.g. slide 36
of <https://www.blackhat.com/docs/us-16/materials/us-16-Wilhelm-Xenpwn-Breaking-Paravirtualized-Devices.pdf>.
I am not aware of any spec that requires the compiler to only perform
one read from the memory location in code like this.
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