[PATCH bpf-next] bpf, capabilities: introduce CAP_BPF

Kees Cook keescook at chromium.org
Mon Sep 30 18:31:29 UTC 2019


On Sat, Sep 28, 2019 at 07:37:27PM -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Wed, 28 Aug 2019 21:07:24 -0700
> Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov at gmail.com> wrote:
> > > 
> > > This won’t make me much more comfortable, since CAP_BPF lets it do an ever-growing set of nasty things. I’d much rather one or both of two things happen:
> > > 
> > > 1. Give it CAP_TRACING only. It can leak my data, but it’s rather hard for it to crash my laptop, lose data, or cause other shenanigans.
> > > 
> > > 2. Improve it a bit do all the privileged ops are wrapped by capset().
> > > 
> > > Does this make sense?  I’m a security person on occasion. I find
> > > vulnerabilities and exploit them deliberately and I break things by
> > > accident on a regular basis. In my considered opinion, CAP_TRACING
> > > alone, even extended to cover part of BPF as I’ve described, is
> > > decently safe. Getting root with just CAP_TRACING will be decently
> > > challenging, especially if I don’t get to read things like sshd’s
> > > memory, and improvements to mitigate even that could be added.  I
> > > am quite confident that attacks starting with CAP_TRACING will have
> > > clear audit signatures if auditing is on.  I am also confident that
> > > CAP_BPF *will* allow DoS and likely privilege escalation, and this
> > > will only get more likely as BPF gets more widely used. And, if
> > > BPF-based auditing ever becomes a thing, writing to the audit
> > > daemon’s maps will be a great way to cover one’s tracks.  
> > 
> > CAP_TRACING, as I'm proposing it, will allow full tracefs access.
> > I think Steven and Massami prefer that as well.
> > That includes kprobe with probe_kernel_read.
> > That also means mini-DoS by installing kprobes everywhere or running
> > too much ftrace.
> 
> I was talking with Kees at Plumbers about this, and we were talking
> about just using simple file permissions. I started playing with some
> patches to allow the tracefs be visible but by default it would only be
> visible by root.
> 
>  rwx------
> 
> Then a start up script (or perhaps mount options) could change the
> group owner, and change this to:
> 
>  rwxrwx---
> 
> Where anyone in the group assigned (say "tracing") gets full access to
> the file system.
> 
> The more I was playing with this, the less I see the need for
> CAP_TRACING for ftrace and reading the format files.

Nice! Thanks for playing with this. I like it because it gives us a way
to push policy into userspace (group membership, etc), and provides a
clean way (hopefully) do separate "read" (kernel memory confidentiality)
from "write" (kernel memory integrity), which wouldn't have been possible
with a single new CAP_...

-Kees

-- 
Kees Cook



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