Re: [PATCHv4 RESEND 0/3] syscalls,x86: Add execveat() system call

From: Eric W. Biederman
Date: Tue Oct 21 2014 - 00:30:22 EST


Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> On Mon, Oct 20, 2014 at 6:48 AM, David Drysdale <drysdale@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On Sun, Oct 19, 2014 at 1:20 AM, Eric W. Biederman
>> <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>>>
>>>> [Added Eric Biederman, since I think your tree might be a reasonable
>>>> route forward for these patches.]
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Jun 5, 2014 at 6:40 AM, David Drysdale <drysdale@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>> Resending, adding cc:linux-api.
>>>>>
>>>>> Also, it may help to add a little more background -- this patch is
>>>>> needed as a (small) part of implementing Capsicum in the Linux kernel.
>>>>>
>>>>> Capsicum is a security framework that has been present in FreeBSD since
>>>>> version 9.0 (Jan 2012), and is based on concepts from object-capability
>>>>> security [1].
>>>>>
>>>>> One of the features of Capsicum is capability mode, which locks down
>>>>> access to global namespaces such as the filesystem hierarchy. In
>>>>> capability mode, /proc is thus inaccessible and so fexecve(3) doesn't
>>>>> work -- hence the need for a kernel-space
>>>>
>>>> I just found myself wanting this syscall for another reason: injecting
>>>> programs into sandboxes or otherwise heavily locked-down namespaces.
>>>>
>>>> For example, I want to be able to reliably do something like nsenter
>>>> --namespace-flags-here toybox sh. Toybox's shell is unusual in that
>>>> it is more or less fully functional, so this should Just Work (tm),
>>>> except that the toybox binary might not exist in the namespace being
>>>> entered. If execveat were available, I could rig nsenter or a similar
>>>> tool to open it with O_CLOEXEC, enter the namespace, and then call
>>>> execveat.
>>>>
>>>> Is there any reason that these patches can't be merged more or less as
>>>> is for 3.19?
>>>
>>> Yes. There is a silliness in how it implements fexecve. The fexecve
>>> case should be use the empty string "" not a NULL pointer to indication
>>> that. That change will then harmonize execveat with the other ...at
>>> system calls and simplify the code and remove a special case. I believe
>>> using the empty string "" requires implementing the AT_EMPTY_PATH flag.
>>
>> Good point -- I'll shift to "" + AT_EMPTY_PATH.
>
> Pending a better idea, I would also see if the patches can be changed
> to return an error if d_path ends up with an "(unreachable)" thing
> rather than failing inexplicably later on.

For my reference we are talking about

> @@ -1489,7 +1524,21 @@ static int do_execve_common(struct filename *filename,
> sched_exec();
>
> bprm->file = file;
> - bprm->filename = bprm->interp = filename->name;
> + if (filename && fd == AT_FDCWD) {
> + bprm->filename = filename->name;
> + } else {
> + pathbuf = kmalloc(PATH_MAX, GFP_TEMPORARY);
> + if (!pathbuf) {
> + retval = -ENOMEM;
> + goto out_unmark;
> + }
> + bprm->filename = d_path(&file->f_path, pathbuf, PATH_MAX);
> + if (IS_ERR(bprm->filename)) {
> + retval = PTR_ERR(bprm->filename);
> + goto out_unmark;
> + }
> + }
> + bprm->interp = bprm->filename;
>
> retval = bprm_mm_init(bprm);
> if (retval)

The interesting case for fexecve is when we either don't know what files
are present or we don't want to depend on which files are present.

As Al pointed out d_path really isn't the right solution. It fails when
printing /proc/self/fd/${fd}/${filename->name} would work, and the
"(deleted)" or "(unreachable)" strings are wrong.

The test for today's cases should be:
if ((filename->name[0] == '/') || fd == AT_FDCWD) {
bprm->filename = filename->name;
}

To handle the case where the file descriptor is relevant.

For the case where the file descriptor is relevant let me suggest
setting bprm->filename and bprm->interp to:

/dev/fd/${fd}/${filename->name}

It is more a description of what we have done but as a magic string it
is descriptive. Documetation/devices.txt documents that /dev/fd/ should
exist, making it an unambiguous path. Further these days the kernel
sets the device naming policy in dev, so I think we are strongly safe in
using that path in any event.

I think execveat is interesting in the kernel because the motivating
cases are the cases where anything except a static executable is
uninteresting.

Now it has been suggested creating a dupfs or a mini-proc. I think that
sounds like a nice companion, to the concept of a locked down root.
But I don't think it removes the need for execveat (because we still
have the case where we don't want to care what is mounted, and are happy
to use static executables).

Eric

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