Re: [kernel-hardening] Re: [PATCH v4 06/13] iscsi: ensure RNG is seeded before use

From: Nicholas A. Bellinger
Date: Fri Jun 30 2017 - 02:02:55 EST


On Mon, 2017-06-26 at 19:38 +0200, Stephan MÃller wrote:
> Am Montag, 26. Juni 2017, 03:23:09 CEST schrieb Nicholas A. Bellinger:
>
> Hi Nicholas,
>
> > Hi Stephan, Lee & Jason,
> >
> > (Adding target-devel CC')
> >
> > Apologies for coming late to the discussion. Comments below.
> >
> > On Sun, 2017-06-18 at 10:04 +0200, Stephan MÃller wrote:
> > > Am Samstag, 17. Juni 2017, 05:45:57 CEST schrieb Lee Duncan:
> > >
> > > Hi Lee,
> > >
> > > > In your testing, how long might a process have to wait? Are we talking
> > > > seconds? Longer? What about timeouts?
> > >
> > > In current kernels (starting with 4.8) this timeout should clear within a
> > > few seconds after boot.
> > >
> > > In older kernels (pre 4.8), my KVM takes up to 90 seconds to reach that
> > > seeding point. I have heard that on IBM System Z this trigger point
> > > requires minutes to be reached.
> >
> > I share the same concern as Lee wrt to introducing latency into the
> > existing iscsi-target login sequence.
> >
> > Namely in the use-cases where a single node is supporting ~1K unique
> > iscsi-target IQNs, and fail-over + re-balancing of IQNs where 100s of
> > login attempts are expected to occur in parallel.
> >
> > If environments exist that require non trivial amounts of time for RNG
> > seeding to be ready for iscsi-target usage, then enforcing this
> > requirement at iscsi login time can open up problems, especially when
> > iscsi host environments may be sensitive to login timeouts, I/O
> > timeouts, et al.
> >
> > That said, I'd prefer to simply wait for RNG to be seeded at modprobe
> > iscsi_target_mod time, instead of trying to enforce randomness during
> > login.
> >
> > This way, those of use who have distributed storage platforms can know
> > to avoid putting a node into a state to accept iscsi-target IQN export
> > migration, before modprobe iscsi_target_mod has successfully loaded and
> > RNG seeding has been confirmed.
> >
> > WDYT..?
>
> We may have a chicken and egg problem when the wait is at the modprobe time.
> Assume the modprobe happens during initramfs time to get access to the root
> file system. In this case, you entire boot process will lock up for an
> indefinite amount of time. The reason is that in order to obtain events
> detected by the RNG, devices need to be initialized and working. Such devices
> commonly start working after the the root partition is mounted as it contains
> all drivers, all configuration information etc.
>
> Note, during the development of my /dev/random implementation, I added the
> getrandom-like blocking behavior to /dev/urandom (which is the equivalent to
> Jason's patch except that it applies to user space). The boot process locked
> up since systemd wanted data from /dev/urandom while it processed the
> initramfs. As it did not get any, the boot process did not commence that could
> deliver new events to be picked up by the RNG.
>
> As I do not have such an iscsi system, I cannot test Jason's patch. But maybe
> the mentioned chicken-and-egg problem I mentioned above is already visible
> with the current patch as it will lead to a blocking of the mounting of the
> root partition in case the root partition is on an iscsi target.

AFAIK, there are no distro initramfs dependencies for iscsi_target_mod,
and every environment I've ever seen loads iscsi_target_mod after
switching to the real rootfs.

For an iscsi initiator that might not been the case, especially if the
rootfs is running atop a iscsi LUN.

But at least for iscsi-target mode, any blocking during modprobe waiting
for RNG seeding would happen outside of initramfs.