Hello Mickael, Could you please share your thoughts for the below proposal. Regards, JK On Sat, 16 May 2020, Jaskaran Singh Khurana wrote: > > Hello Mickael, > > On Thu, 14 May 2020, Mickaël Salaün wrote: > >> >> On 12/05/2020 22:46, Deven Bowers wrote: >>> >>> >>> On 5/11/2020 11:03 AM, Deven Bowers wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> On 5/10/2020 2:28 AM, Mickaël Salaün wrote: >>>> >>>> [...snip] >>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Additionally, rules are evaluated top-to-bottom. As a result, any >>>>>> revocation rules, or denies should be placed early in the file to >>>>>> ensure >>>>>> that these rules are evaluated before a rule with "action=ALLOW" is >>>>>> hit. >>>>>> >>>>>> IPE policy is designed to be forward compatible and backwards >>>>>> compatible, >>>>>> thus any failure to parse a rule will result in the line being >>>>>> ignored, >>>>>> and a warning being emitted. If backwards compatibility is not >>>>>> required, >>>>>> the kernel commandline parameter and sysctl, ipe.strict_parse can be >>>>>> enabled, which will cause these warnings to be fatal. >>>>> >>>>> Ignoring unknown command may lead to inconsistent beaviors. To achieve >>>>> forward compatibility, I think it would be better to never ignore >>>>> unknown rule but to give a way to userspace to known what is the >>>>> current >>>>> kernel ABI. This could be done with a securityfs file listing the >>>>> current policy grammar. >>>>> >>>> >>>> That's a fair point. From a manual perspective, I think this is fine. >>>> A human-user can interpret a grammar successfully on their own when new >>>> syntax is introduced. >>>> >>>>  From a producing API perspective, I'd have to think about it a bit >>>> more. Ideally, the grammar would be structured in such a way that the >>>> userland >>>> interpreter of this grammar would not have to be updated once new syntax >>>> is introduced, avoiding the need to update the userland binary. To do so >>>> generically ("op=%s") is easy, but doesn't necessarily convey sufficient >>>> information (what happens when a new "op" token is introduced?). I think >>>> this may come down to regular expression representations of valid values >>>> for these tokens, which worries me as regular expressions are incredibly >>>> error-prone[1]. >>>> >>>> I'll see what I can come up with regarding this. >>> >>> I have not found a way that I like to expose some kind of grammar >>> through securityfs that can be understood by usermode to parse the >>> policy. Here's what I propose as a compromise: >>> >>>     1. I remove the unknown command behavior. This address your >>> first point about inconsistent behaviors, and effectively removes the >>> strict_parse sysctl (as it is always enabled). >>> >>>     2. I introduce a versioning system for the properties >>> themselves. The valid set of properties and their versions >>> can be found in securityfs, under say, ipe/config in a key=value >>> format where `key` indicates the understood token, and `value` >>> indicates their current version. For example: >>> >>>     $ cat $SECURITYFS/ipe/config >>>     op=1 >>>     action=1 >>>     policy_name=1 >>>     policy_version=1 >>>     dmverity_signature=1 >>>     dmverity_roothash=1 >>>     boot_verified=1 >> >> The name ipe/config sounds like a file to configure IPE. Maybe something >> like ipe/config_abi or ipe/config_grammar? >> >>> >>> if new syntax is introduced, the version number is increased. >>> >>>     3. The format of those versions are documented as part of >>> the admin-guide around IPE. If user-mode at that point wants to rip >>> the documentation formats and correlate with the versioning, then >>> it fulfills the same functionality as above, with out the complexity >>> around exposing a parsing grammar and interpreting it on-the-fly. >>> Many of these are unlikely to move past version 1, however. >>> >>> Thoughts? >>> >> >> That seems reasonable. >> > > There is a use case for not having strict parsing in the cloud world where > there are multiple versions of OS deployed across a large number of systems > say 100,000 nodes. An OS update can take weeks to complete across all the > nodes, and we end up having a heterogeneous mix of OS versions. > > Without non-strict parsing, to fix an issue in a policy we will need to > update the various versions of the policy (one each for all OS versions > which have different IPE policy schema). We will lose the agility we need to > fix and deploy something urgently in the policy, the nodes might be failing > some critical workloads meanwhile. All the various versions of the policy > will need to be changed and production signed then deployed etc. Further some > versions might introduce newer issues and we will need to see what all > versions of the policy have that bug. > > I propose keeping the non-strict option as well to cater to this use case. > Let me know your thoughts on this. > > Regards, > JK >