From: 'Christoph Hellwig' > Sent: 23 July 2020 15:45 > > On Thu, Jul 23, 2020 at 02:42:11PM +0000, David Laight wrote: > > From: Christoph Hellwig > > > Sent: 23 July 2020 07:09 > > > > > > The bpfilter user mode helper processes the optval address using > > > process_vm_readv. Don't send it kernel addresses fed under > > > set_fs(KERNEL_DS) as that won't work. > > > > What sort of operations is the bpf filter doing on the sockopt buffers? > > > > Any attempts to reject some requests can be thwarted by a second > > application thread modifying the buffer after the bpf filter has > > checked that it allowed. > > > > You can't do security by reading a user buffer twice. > > I'm not saying that I approve of the design, but the current bpfilter > design uses process_vm_readv to access the buffer, which obviously does > not work with kernel buffers. Is this a different bit of bpf that that which used to directly intercept setsockopt() requests and pass them down from a kernel buffer? I can't held feeling that bpf is getting 'too big for its boots' and will have a local-user privilege escalation hiding in it somewhere. I've had to fix my 'out of tree' driver to remove the [sg]etsockopt() calls. Some of the replacements will go badly wrong if I've accidentally lost track of the socket type. I do have a daemon process sleeping in the driver - so I can wake it up and make the requests from it with a user buffer. I may have to implement that to get the negotiated number of 'ostreams' to an SCTP connection. David - Registered Address Lakeside, Bramley Road, Mount Farm, Milton Keynes, MK1 1PT, UK Registration No: 1397386 (Wales)