NFS mount fail
Roberto Sassu
roberto.sassu at huaweicloud.com
Fri May 5 06:53:50 UTC 2023
On Thu, 2023-05-04 at 17:59 -0700, Casey Schaufler wrote:
> On 5/4/2023 9:11 AM, Roberto Sassu wrote:
> > Hi Casey
> >
> > while developing the fix for overlayfs, I tried first to address the
> > issue of a NFS filesystem failing to mount.
> >
> > The NFS server does not like the packets sent by the client:
> >
> > 14:52:20.827208 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 60628, offset 0, flags [DF], proto TCP (6), length 72, options (unknown 134,EOL))
> > localhost.localdomain.omginitialrefs > _gateway.nfs: Flags [S], cksum 0x7618 (incorrect -> 0xa18c), seq 455337903, win 64240, options [mss 1460,sackOK,TS val 2178524519 ecr 0,nop,wscale 7], length 0
> > 14:52:20.827376 IP (tos 0xc0, ttl 64, id 5906, offset 0, flags [none], proto ICMP (1), length 112, options (unknown 134,EOL))
> > _gateway > localhost.localdomain: ICMP parameter problem - octet 22, length 80
> >
> > I looked at the possible causes. SELinux works properly.
>
> SELinux was the reference LSM implementation for labeled networking.
>
> > What it seems to happen is that there is a default netlabel mapping,
> > that is used to send the packets out.
>
> Correct. SELinux only uses CIPSO options for MLS. Smack uses CIPSO for
> almost all packets.
>
> > We are in this part of the code:
> >
> > Thread 1 hit Breakpoint 2, netlbl_sock_setattr (sk=sk at entry=0xffff888025178000, family=family at entry=2, secattr=0xffff88802504b200) at net/netlabel/netlabel_kapi.c:980
> > 980 {
> > (gdb) n
> > 771 __rcu_read_lock();
> > (gdb)
> > 985 dom_entry = netlbl_domhsh_getentry(secattr->domain, family);
> > (gdb)
> > 986 if (dom_entry == NULL) {
> > (gdb)
> > 990 switch (family) {
> > (gdb)
> > 992 switch (dom_entry->def.type) {
> >
> > Here is the difference between Smack and SELinux.
> >
> > Smack:
> >
> > (gdb) p *dom_entry
> > $2 = {domain = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>, family = 2, def = {type = 3, {addrsel = 0xffff888006bbef40, cipso = 0xffff888006bbef40, calipso = 0xffff888006bbef40}}, valid = 1, list = {next = 0xffff88800767f6e8, prev = 0xffff88800767f6e8}, rcu = {next = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>,
> > func = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>}}
> >
> > SELinux:
> >
> > (gdb) p *dom_entry
> > $5 = {domain = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>, family = 2, def = {type = 5, {addrsel = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>, cipso = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>, calipso = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>}}, valid = 1, list = {next = 0xffff888006012c88, prev = 0xffff888006012c88}, rcu = {
> > next = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>, func = 0x0 <fixed_percpu_data>}}
> >
> >
> > type = 3 (for Smack) is NETLBL_NLTYPE_CIPSOV4.
> > type = 5 (for SELinux) is NETLBL_NLTYPE_UNLABELED.
> >
> > This is why SELinux works (no incompatible options are sent).
>
> SELinux "works" because that's the use case that was verified.
>
> > The netlabel mapping is added here:
> >
> > static void smk_cipso_doi(void)
> > {
> >
> > [...]
> >
> > rc = netlbl_cfg_cipsov4_map_add(doip->doi, NULL, NULL, NULL, &nai);
> >
> >
> > Not sure exactly how we can solve this issue. Just checked that
> > commenting the call to smk_cipso_doi() in init_smk_fs() allows the NFS
> > filesystem to be mounted.
>
> Are both the server and client using Smack? Are they on a network that can
> propagate labeled packets? What are you using for a Smack rule configuration?
Only the client (Fedora 38). The server is Ubuntu 20.04.06 LTS and uses
Apparmor. The client is a VM created with libvirt. The connection is
the classic tap attached to a bridge.
Thanks
Roberto
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