[<prev] [next>] [<thread-prev] [thread-next>] [day] [month] [year] [list]
Message-ID: <YoTsYvnACbCNIMPE@T590>
Date: Wed, 18 May 2022 20:53:54 +0800
From: Ming Lei <ming.lei@...hat.com>
To: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@...hat.com>
Cc: Jens Axboe <axboe@...nel.dk>, linux-block@...r.kernel.org,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
Harris James R <james.r.harris@...el.com>,
io-uring@...r.kernel.org,
Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@...labora.com>,
ZiyangZhang <ZiyangZhang@...ux.alibaba.com>,
Xiaoguang Wang <xiaoguang.wang@...ux.alibaba.com>,
ming.lei@...hat.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH V2 0/1] ubd: add io_uring based userspace block driver
On Wed, May 18, 2022 at 11:45:32AM +0100, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> On Wed, May 18, 2022 at 03:09:46PM +0800, Ming Lei wrote:
> > On Tue, May 17, 2022 at 03:06:34PM +0100, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> > > Here are some more thoughts on the ubd-control device:
> > >
> > > The current patch provides a ubd-control device for processes with
> > > suitable permissions (i.e. root) to create, start, stop, and fetch
> > > information about devices.
> > >
> > > There is no isolation between devices created by one process and those
> >
> > I understand linux hasn't device namespace yet, so can you share the
> > rational behind the idea of device isolation, is it because ubd device
> > is served by ubd daemon which belongs to one pid NS? Or the user creating
> > /dev/ubdbN belongs to one user NS?
>
> With the current model a process with access to ubd-control has control
> over all ubd devices. This is not desirable for most container use cases
> because ubd-control usage within a container means that container could
> stop any ubd device on the system.
>
> Even for non-container use cases it's problematic that two applications
> that use ubd can interfere with each other. If an application passes the
> wrong device ID they can stop the other application's device, for
> example.
>
> I think it's worth supporting a model where there are multiple ubd
> daemons that are not cooperating/aware of each other. They should be
> isolated from each other.
Maybe I didn't mention it clearly, I meant the following model in last email:
1) every user can send UBD_CMD_ADD_DEV to /dev/ubd-control
2) the created /dev/ubdcN & /dev/udcbN are owned by the user who creates
it
3) only the user who has permission to /dev/ubdcN can send other control
commands(START_DEV/STOP_DEV/GET_DEV_INFO/GET_QUEUE_AFFINITY/DEL_DEV);
and same with /dev/ubdbN
4) for unprivileged user who owns /dev/ubdbN, limit kernel behavior,
such as, not probed for partitions and LVM, only allow unprivileged
mounts,...
So ubd device can be isolated wrt. user NS.
>
> > IMO, ubd device is one file in VFS, and FS permission should be applied,
> > then here the closest model should be user NS, and process privilege &
> > file ownership.
>
> Yes, /dev/ubdbN can has file ownership/permissions and the cgroup device
> controller can restrict access too. That works fine when the device was
> created previously.
>
> But what about ubd device creation via ubd-control?
>
> The problem is a global control interface like ubd-control gives access
> to all ubd devices. There is no way to let an application/container
> control (create/start/stop/etc) some ubd devices but not all. I think
> ubd-control must be more fine-grained so multiple
> applications/containers can use it without the possibility of
> interference.
>
> /dev/ubdcN is a separate problem. The cgroup device controller can limit
> the device nodes that are accessible from a process. However, this
> requires reserving device minor number ranges for each
> application/container so they can only mknod/open their own ubd devices
> and not devices that don't belong to them. Maybe there is a better
> solution?
>
> /dev/ubdbN has similar requirements to /dev/ubdcN. It should be possible
> to create a new /dev/ubdbN but not access an existing device that belong
>
> So if we want to let containers create ubd devices without granting them
> access to all devices on the system, then the ubd-control interface
> needs to be changed (see below) and the container needs a reserved range
> of ubdcN minor numbers. Any container using ubdbN needs the cgroup
> device controller and file ownership/permissions to open the block
> device.
>
> > > created by another. Therefore two processes that do not trust each other
> > > cannot both use UBD without potential interference. There is also no
> >
> > Can you share what the expectation is for this situation?
>
> Two users should be able to run ubd daemons on the same system without
> being able to stop each other's devices.
Yeah, the above process privilege & file ownership based way can reach
the goal in user NS.
>
> > It is the created UBD which can only be used in this NS, or can only be
> > visible inside this NS? I guess the latter isn't possible since we don't
> > have this kind of isolation framework yet.
>
> It should be possible to access the ubd device according to file
> ownership/permissions. No new isolation framework is needed for that.
>
> But ubd-control should not grant global access to all ubd devices, at
> least not in the typical case of a ubd daemon that just wishes to
> create/start/stop its own devices.
Yeah, I agree.
>
> > > isolation for containers.
> > >
> > > I think it would be a mistake to keep the ubd-control interface in its
> > > current form since the current global/root model is limited. Instead I
> > > suggest:
> > > - Creating a device returns a new file descriptor instead of a global
> > > dev_id. The device can be started/stopped/configured through this (and
> > > only through this) per-device file descriptor. The device is not
> > > visible to other processes through ubd-control so interference is not
> > > possible. In order to give another process control over the device the
> > > fd can be passed (e.g. SCM_RIGHTS).
> > >
> >
> > /dev/ubdcN can only be opened by the process which is the descendant of
> > the process which creates the device by sending ADD_DEV.
> >
> > But the device can be deleted/queried by other processes, however, I
> > think it is reasonable if all these processes has permission to do that,
> > such as all processes owns the device with same uid.
>
> I don't think it's a good idea to require all ubd daemons to have
> CAP_SYS_ADMIN/same uid. That's the main point I'm trying to make and the
> discussion is based on that.
I meant only the user who owns /dev/ubdcN can send the command to
/dev/ubd-control for controlling /dev/ubdcN. I believe this way is
straightforward.
>
> > So can we apply process privilege & file ownership for isolating ubd device?
> >
> > If per-process FD is used, it may confuse people, because process can
> > not delete/query ubd device even though its uid shows it has the
> > privilege.
>
> Is it better to stop the device via ubd-control instead of a
> daemon-specific command (or just killing the daemon process)?
>
> Regarding querying the device, the daemon has more information
> associated with the device (e.g. if it's an iSCSI initiator it will have
> the iSCSI URI). The ubd driver can only tell you the daemon pid and the
> block device attributes that should already be available via sysfs.
> Quering the daemon will yield more useful information than using
> ubd-control.
I don't think it is good to interrupt daemon for this admin/control job,
which may distract daemon from handling normal IO tasks, also not necessary
to make daemon implementation more complicated.
We should separate admin task from normal IO handling, which is one
common design pattern.
>
> > > Now multiple applications/containers/etc can use ubd-control without
> > > interfering with each other. The security model still requires root
> > > though since devices can be malicious.
> > >
> > > FUSE allows unprivileged mounts (see fuse_allow_current_process()). Only
> > > processes with the same uid as the FUSE daemon can access such mounts
> > > (in the default configuration). This prevents security issues while
> > > still allowing unprivileged use cases.
> >
> > OK, looks FUSE applies process privilege & file ownership for dealing
> > with unprivileged mounts.
> >
> > >
> > > I suggest adapting the FUSE security model to block devices:
> > > - Devices can be created without CAP_SYS_ADMIN but they have an
> > > 'unprivileged' flag set to true.
> > > - Unprivileged devices are not probed for partitions and LVM doesn't
> > > touch them. This means the kernel doesn't access these devices via
> > > code paths that might be exploitable.
> >
> > The above two makes sense.
> >
> > > - When another process with a different uid from ubdsrv opens an
> > > unprivileged device, -EACCES is returned. This protects other
> > > uids from the unprivileged device.
> >
> > OK, only the user who owns the device can access unprivileged device.
> >
> > > - When another process with a different uid from ubdsrv opens a
> > > _privileged_ device there is no special access check because ubdsrv is
> > > privileged.
> >
> > IMO, it depends if uid of this process has permission to access the
> > ubd device, and we can set ubd device's owership by the process
> > credentials.
>
> Yes, file ownership/permissions are still relevant.
>
> >
> > >
> > > With these changes UBD can be used by unprivileged processes and
> > > containers. I think it's worth discussing the details and having this
> > > model from the start so UBD can be used in a wide range of use cases.
> >
> > I am pretty happy to discuss & figure out the details, but not sure
> > it is one blocker for ubd:
> >
> > 1) kernel driver of loop/nbd or others haven't support the isolation
>
> It may be better to compare it with FUSE where unprivileged users can
> run their own servers. Imagine FUSE required a global root control
> interface like ubd-control, then it wouldn't be possible to have
> unprivileged FUSE mounts.
>
> > 2) still don't know exact ubd use case for containers
>
> There are two common use cases for block devices:
> 1. File systems or volume managers
> 2. Direct access for databases, backup tools, disk image tools, etc
>
> The file system use case involved kernel code and probably needs to be
> restricted to untrusted containers cannot exploit the kernel file system
> implementations. I'll ignore this use case and containers probably
> shouldn't do this.
>
> The second use case is when you have any program that can operate on a
> block device. It could be an application that imports/exports a block
> device from network storage. This kind of application should be able to
> do its job without CAP_SYS_ADMIN and it should be able to run in a
> container. It might be part of KubeVirt's Containerized Data Importer,
> for example, and is deployed as a container.
>
> If ubd supports unprivileged operation then this container use case is
> straightforward. If not, then it's problematic because it either
> requires a privileged container or some kind of privileged helper
> outside the container. At that point people may avoid ubd because it's
> too hard to deploy with privilege requirements.
OK, thanks for the sharing. In short, container requires unprivileged
operation on block device. I think it makes sense.
Thanks,
Ming
Powered by blists - more mailing lists