[PATCH v1 0/4] [RFC] Implement Trampoline File Descriptor

David Laight David.Laight at ACULAB.COM
Mon Aug 3 08:23:03 UTC 2020


From: Madhavan T. Venkataraman
> Sent: 02 August 2020 19:55
> To: Andy Lutomirski <luto at kernel.org>
> Cc: Kernel Hardening <kernel-hardening at lists.openwall.com>; Linux API <linux-api at vger.kernel.org>;
> linux-arm-kernel <linux-arm-kernel at lists.infradead.org>; Linux FS Devel <linux-
> fsdevel at vger.kernel.org>; linux-integrity <linux-integrity at vger.kernel.org>; LKML <linux-
> kernel at vger.kernel.org>; LSM List <linux-security-module at vger.kernel.org>; Oleg Nesterov
> <oleg at redhat.com>; X86 ML <x86 at kernel.org>
> Subject: Re: [PATCH v1 0/4] [RFC] Implement Trampoline File Descriptor
> 
> More responses inline..
> 
> On 7/28/20 12:31 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> >> On Jul 28, 2020, at 6:11 AM, madvenka at linux.microsoft.com wrote:
> >>
> >> From: "Madhavan T. Venkataraman" <madvenka at linux.microsoft.com>
> >>
> >
> > 2. Use existing kernel functionality.  Raise a signal, modify the
> > state, and return from the signal.  This is very flexible and may not
> > be all that much slower than trampfd.
> 
> Let me understand this. You are saying that the trampoline code
> would raise a signal and, in the signal handler, set up the context
> so that when the signal handler returns, we end up in the target
> function with the context correctly set up. And, this trampoline code
> can be generated statically at build time so that there are no
> security issues using it.
> 
> Have I understood your suggestion correctly?

I was thinking that you'd just let the 'not executable' page fault
signal happen (SIGSEGV?) when the code jumps to on-stack trampoline
is executed.

The user signal handler can then decode the faulting instruction
and, if it matches the expected on-stack trampoline, modify the
saved registers before returning from the signal.

No kernel changes and all you need to add to the program is
an architecture-dependant signal handler.

	David

-
Registered Address Lakeside, Bramley Road, Mount Farm, Milton Keynes, MK1 1PT, UK
Registration No: 1397386 (Wales)



More information about the Linux-security-module-archive mailing list