Hi! I put this together... it may be useful for someone to understand what the issues are. I guess I'd like to know from security team if they find it useful, and from kernel people if I'm missing something or if there are errors... Best regards, Pavel Good and bad ideas w.r.t. kernel and security Kernel tries to provid many security guarantees at different levels. Still, some things are easier to guarantee than others, and some security barriers are really important, while others... not so much. Kernel should be secure against remote attackers. And it reasonably is, when not, we get it fixed with high priority. Kernel should protect itself and other users against local, non-priviledged users. Tries, but attack surface is big. People don't care about DoS attacks much. => Running untrusted code is a bad idea. Forkbomb is few characters in sh. Fast, out-of-order CPUs leak user data via timing side-channels. Those CPUs should not process sensitive data. JITs can be used to extract the data. We can try to work around the problems and apply vendor-provided workarounds, but there are likely more problems in future. Similar bugs are hidden in CPU microarchitectures, and in particular Spectre workarounds are whack-a-mole and thus incomplete. Hyperthreading makes those attacks easier. => Use suitable CPUs to process sensitive data. Filesystems are complex, robustness against malformed filesystems is hard. Some filesystems try to be robust against filesystems corruption, and some don't even do that. Some perform checks during mount, but that means that malicious device can work around them. => Don't mount untrusted filesystems. If you have to, use simple and common filesystem. VFAT might be good choice. Kernel should protect itself against local users with CAP_XX. Yes, there's capability system, and in theory capabilities should be separated. => Don't rely on that. Noone else does. Some systems try to protect themselves against people with physical access. Laws of physics says it is impossible, but people can still try to make it more costly for the "attacker". => Please don't rely on that. -- DENX Software Engineering GmbH, Managing Director: Wolfgang Denk HRB 165235 Munich, Office: Kirchenstr.5, D-82194 Groebenzell, Germany