Re: mmap_min_addr and your local LSM (ok, just SELinux)

From: Kyle Moffett
Date: Mon Jul 27 2009 - 23:28:38 EST


On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 20:19, Alan Cox<alan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> A dumb question perhaps, but while addling my brain over the tty layer I
> was wondering if for the specific case of jump through NULL (which seems
> to be the most common but by no means only problem case that gets
> exploited) is there any reason we can't set a default breakpoint for
> executing 0 and fix that up as a trap in the kernel ?
>
> Even user code that needs zero page mapped such as BIOS hackery doesn't
> actually jump through zero often if ever, and would be a userspace not a
> kernel space trap source so could be fixed up.
>
> Just a random "I've been staring at code too long today" thought ?

Alternatively, since such emulation code is almost certainly not
performance sensitive, perhaps it's possible to go the kmemcheck-style
route? We could probably "allow" userspace mappings of pages below
mmap_min_addr for unprivileged processes by trapping and
single-stepping the appropriate memory access instructions.

Every time anything tries to access that memory it would trigger a
fault; if the code is in kernel space we BUG() and dump a nastygram to
dmesg. For anything else, we either temporarily map the page and
single-step or simply emulate the instruction. Sure, it might be slow
as hell... but the unprivileged use-cases seem to be few and
far-between.

Cheers,
Kyle Moffett
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