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Message-ID: <20121204173625.GA13993@redhat.com>
Date:	Tue, 4 Dec 2012 19:36:26 +0200
From:	"Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@...hat.com>
To:	Paul Moore <pmoore@...hat.com>
Cc:	Jason Wang <jasowang@...hat.com>, netdev@...r.kernel.org,
	linux-security-module@...r.kernel.org, selinux@...ho.nsa.gov
Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH 2/2] tun: fix LSM/SELinux labeling of tun/tap devices

On Tue, Dec 04, 2012 at 11:18:57AM -0500, Paul Moore wrote:
> On Tuesday, December 04, 2012 09:24:43 PM Jason Wang wrote:
> > On Monday, December 03, 2012 11:22:29 AM Paul Moore wrote:
> > > It may be that I'm misunderstanding TUNSETQUEUE and/or TUNSETIFF.  Can you
> > > elaborate as to why they should be different?
> > 
> > If I understand correctly, before multiqueue patchset, TUNSETIFF is used to:
> > 
> > 1) Create the tun/tap network device
> > 2) For persistent device, re-attach the fd to the network device / socket.
> > In this case, we call selinux_tun_dev_attch() to relabel the socket sid (in
> > fact also the device's since the socket were persistent also) to the sid of
> > process that calls TUNSETIFF.
> > 
> > So, after the changes of multiqueue, we need try to preserve those policy.
> > The interesting part is the introducing of TUNSETQUEUE, it's used to attach
> > more file descriptors/sockets to a tun/tap device after at least one file
> > descriptor were attached to the tun/tap device through TUNSETIFF. So I
> > think maybe we need differ those two ioctls. This patch looks fine for
> > TUNSETQUEUE, but for TUNSETIFF, we need relabel the tunsec to the process
> > that calling TUNSETIFF for persistent device?
> 
> Okay, based on your explanation of TUNSETQUEUE, the steps below are what I 
> believe we need to do ... if you disagree speak up quickly please.
> 
> A. TUNSETIFF (new, non-persistent device)
> 
> [Allocate and initialize the tun_struct LSM state based on the calling 
> process, use this state to label the TUN socket.]
> 
> 1. Call security_tun_dev_create() which authorizes the action.
> 2. Call security_tun_dev_alloc_security() which allocates the tun_struct LSM 
> blob and SELinux sets some internal blob state to record the label of the 
> calling process.
> 3. Call security_tun_dev_attach() which sets the label of the TUN socket to 
> match the label stored in the tun_struct LSM blob during A2.  No authorization 
> is done at this point since the socket is new/unlabeled.

> B. TUNSETIFF (existing, persistent device)
> 
> [Relabel the existing tun_struct LSM state based on the calling process, use
> this state to label the TUN socket.]
> 
> 1. Attempt to relabel/reset the tun_struct LSM blob from the currently stored 
> value, set during A2, to the label of the current calling process. *** THIS IS 
> NOT CURRENTLY DONE IN THE RFC PATCH ***
> 2. Call security_tun_dev_attach() which sets the label of the TUN socket to
> match the label stored in the tun_struct LSM blob during B1. No authorization 
> is done at this point since the socket is new/unlabeled.
> 
> C. TUNSETQUEUE
> 
> [Use the existing tun_struct LSM state to label the new TUN socket.]
> 
> 1. Call security_tun_dev_attach() which sets the label of the TUN socket to 
> match the label stored in the tun_struct LSM blob set during either A2 or B1.  
> No authorization is done at this point since the socket is new/unlabeled.


Here's what bothers me. libvirt currently opens tun and passes
fd to qemu.
What would prevent qemu from attaching fd using TUNSETQUEUE
to another device it does not own?


> > btw. Current code does allow calling TUNSETQUEUE to a persistent tun/tap
> > device with no file attached. It should be a bug and need to be fixed.
> 
> Since you wrote that code will you be submitting a patch to fix that problem?
> 
> > > One thing that I think we probably should change is the relabelto/from
> > > permissions in the function above (selinux_tun_dev_attach()); in the case
> > > where the socket does not yet have a label, e.g. 'sksec->sid == 0', we
> > > should probably skip the relabel permissions since we want to assign the
> > > TUN device label regardless in this case.
> > 
> > I'm not familiar with the selinux, have a quick glance of the code, looks
> > like the label has been initialized to SECINITSID_KERNEL in
> > selinux_socket_post_create().
> 
> Unless I've missed something in your changes, the multiqueue code never calls 
> any socket code which ends up calling {security,selinux}_socket_post_create(); 
> I believe you only call sk_alloc() which ends up calling 
> {security,selinux}_sk_alloc() which sets SECINITSID_UNLABELED (I mistakenly 
> wrote 0 instead in my earlier email which is techincally SECSID_NULL).  Either 
> way, I still think the logic I originally described above is correct.
> 
> -- 
> paul moore
> security and virtualization @ redhat
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