Re: [PATCH v2 2/3] Teach SELinux about anonymous inodes

From: Stephen Smalley
Date: Thu Mar 26 2020 - 13:37:35 EST


On 3/25/20 7:02 PM, Daniel Colascione wrote:
This change uses the anon_inodes and LSM infrastructure introduced in
the previous patch to give SELinux the ability to control
anonymous-inode files that are created using the new _secure()
anon_inodes functions.

A SELinux policy author detects and controls these anonymous inodes by
adding a name-based type_transition rule that assigns a new security
type to anonymous-inode files created in some domain. The name used
for the name-based transition is the name associated with the
anonymous inode for file listings --- e.g., "[userfaultfd]" or
"[perf_event]".

Example:

type uffd_t;
type_transition sysadm_t sysadm_t : file uffd_t "[userfaultfd]";
allow sysadm_t uffd_t:file { create };

These should use :anon_inode rather than :file since the class is no longer file.


(The next patch in this series is necessary for making userfaultfd
support this new interface. The example above is just
for exposition.)

Signed-off-by: Daniel Colascione <dancol@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
security/selinux/hooks.c | 54 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
security/selinux/include/classmap.h | 2 ++
2 files changed, 56 insertions(+)

diff --git a/security/selinux/hooks.c b/security/selinux/hooks.c
index 1659b59fb5d7..b9eb45c2e4e5 100644
--- a/security/selinux/hooks.c
+++ b/security/selinux/hooks.c
@@ -2915,6 +2915,59 @@ static int selinux_inode_init_security(struct inode *inode, struct inode *dir,
return 0;
}
+static int selinux_inode_init_security_anon(struct inode *inode,
+ const struct qstr *name,
+ const struct file_operations *fops,
+ const struct inode *context_inode)
+{
+ const struct task_security_struct *tsec = selinux_cred(current_cred());
+ struct common_audit_data ad;
+ struct inode_security_struct *isec;
+ int rc;
+
+ if (unlikely(!selinux_state.initialized))
+ return 0;
+
+ isec = selinux_inode(inode);
+
+ /*
+ * We only get here once per ephemeral inode. The inode has
+ * been initialized via inode_alloc_security but is otherwise
+ * untouched.
+ */
+
+ if (context_inode) {
+ struct inode_security_struct *context_isec =
+ selinux_inode(context_inode);
+ isec->sclass = context_isec->sclass;
+ isec->sid = context_isec->sid;
+ } else {
+ isec->sclass = SECCLASS_ANON_INODE;
+ rc = security_transition_sid(
+ &selinux_state, tsec->sid, tsec->sid,
+ SECCLASS_FILE, name, &isec->sid);

You should use isec->sclass == SECCLASS_ANON_INODE instead of SECCLASS_FILE here.