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Message-ID: <20201124172152.q5egylertvj3zp3w@wittgenstein>
Date:   Tue, 24 Nov 2020 18:21:52 +0100
From:   Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@...ntu.com>
To:     Greg KH <gregkh@...uxfoundation.org>
Cc:     Jann Horn <jannh@...gle.com>,
        Christoph Hellwig <hch@...radead.org>,
        Kees Cook <keescook@...omium.org>,
        Andy Lutomirski <luto@...capital.net>,
        Will Drewry <wad@...omium.org>, Mark Wielaard <mark@...mp.org>,
        Florian Weimer <fweimer@...hat.com>,
        Linux API <linux-api@...r.kernel.org>,
        "open list:DOCUMENTATION" <linux-doc@...r.kernel.org>,
        kernel list <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
        dev@...ncontainers.org, Jonathan Corbet <corbet@....net>,
        Carlos O'Donell <carlos@...hat.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] syscalls: Document OCI seccomp filter interactions &
 workaround

On Tue, Nov 24, 2020 at 06:15:36PM +0100, Greg KH wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 24, 2020 at 06:06:38PM +0100, Jann Horn wrote:
> > +seccomp maintainers/reviewers
> > [thread context is at
> > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-api/87lfer2c0b.fsf@oldenburg2.str.redhat.com/
> > ]
> > 
> > On Tue, Nov 24, 2020 at 5:49 PM Christoph Hellwig <hch@...radead.org> wrote:
> > > On Tue, Nov 24, 2020 at 03:08:05PM +0100, Mark Wielaard wrote:
> > > > For valgrind the issue is statx which we try to use before falling back
> > > > to stat64, fstatat or stat (depending on architecture, not all define
> > > > all of these). The problem with these fallbacks is that under some
> > > > containers (libseccomp versions) they might return EPERM instead of
> > > > ENOSYS. This causes really obscure errors that are really hard to
> > > > diagnose.
> > >
> > > So find a way to detect these completely broken container run times
> > > and refuse to run under them at all.  After all they've decided to
> > > deliberately break the syscall ABI.  (and yes, we gave the the rope
> > > to do that with seccomp :().
> > 
> > FWIW, if the consensus is that seccomp filters that return -EPERM by
> > default are categorically wrong, I think it should be fairly easy to
> > add a check to the seccomp core that detects whether the installed
> > filter returns EPERM for some fixed unused syscall number and, if so,
> > prints a warning to dmesg or something along those lines...
> 
> Why?  seccomp is saying "this syscall is not permitted", so -EPERM seems
> like the correct error to provide here.  It's not -ENOSYS as the syscall
> is present.
> 
> As everyone knows, there are other ways to have -EPERM be returned from
> a syscall if you don't have the correct permissions to do something.
> Why is seccomp being singled out here?  It's doing the correct thing.

The correct solution to this problem is simple: the standard and the
problematic container runtimes need to be fixed to return ENOSYS as I
said in my first mail. Imho, the kernel neither should need to log
anything or be opinionated about what error is correct or not. Imho,
this is a broken standard and that's where the story ends.

We've had that argument about ENOSYS being the correct errno in such
scenarios in userspace already and that's been ignored for _years_. Now,
as could be expected it's suddenly the kernel who's supposed to fix
this. That's totally wrong imho.

Christian

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