Re: [PATCH 6/9] x86, pkeys: add pkey set/get syscalls

From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Mon Jul 11 2016 - 10:45:46 EST


On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 7:34 AM, Dave Hansen <dave@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 07/10/2016 09:25 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>> 2. When thread A allocates a pkey, how does it lock down thread B?
>>
>> #2 could be addressed by using fully-locked-down as the initial state
>> post-exec() and copying the state on clone(). Dave, are there any
>> cases in practice where one thread would allocate a pkey and want
>> other threads to immediately have access to the memory with that key?
>
> The only one I can think of is a model where pkeys are used more in a
> "denial" mode rather than an "allow" mode.
>
> For instance, perhaps you don't want to modify your app to use pkeys,
> except for a small routine where you handle untrusted user data. You
> would, in that routine, deny access to a bunch of keys, but otherwise
> allow access to all so you didn't have to change any other parts of the app.
>
> Should we instead just recommend to userspace that they lock down access
> to keys by default in all threads as a best practice?

Is that really better than doing it in-kernel? My concern is that
we'll find library code that creates a thread, and that code could run
before the pkey-aware part of the program even starts running. So how
is user code supposed lock down all of its threads?

seccomp has TSYNC for this, but I don't think that PKRU allows
something like that.