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From: Andrew Vagin <avagin@virtuozzo.com>
To: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
Cc: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>,
	Linux API <linux-api@vger.kernel.org>,
	Containers <containers@lists.linux-foundation.org>,
	lkml <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>, <criu@openvz.org>,
	"Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)" <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [CRIU] Introspecting userns relationships to other namespaces?
Date: Sat, 9 Jul 2016 00:26:28 -0700	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20160709072627.GA7480@outlook.office365.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <87bn27o6j5.fsf@x220.int.ebiederm.org>

On Fri, Jul 08, 2016 at 10:05:18PM -0500, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> writes:
> 
> > On Fri, 2016-07-08 at 18:52 -0500, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> >> James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@Hansenpartnership.com> writes:
> >> 
> >> > On July 8, 2016 1:38:19 PM PDT, Andrew Vagin <avagin@virtuozzo.com>
> >> > wrote:
> >> 
> >> > > What do you think about the idea to mount nsfs and be able to 
> >> > > look up any alive namespace by inum:
> >> > 
> >> > I think I like it.  It will give us a way to enter any extant
> >> > namespace.  It will work for Eric's fs namespaces as well.  Perhaps 
> >> > a /process/ns/<inum> Directory?
> >
> > As you understood, I meant /proc/ns/<inum> (damn mobile phone
> > completions).
> >
> >> *Shivers*
> >> 
> >> That makes it very easy to bypass any existing controls that exist 
> >> for getting at namespaces.  It is true that everything of that kind 
> >> is directory based but still.
> >> 
> >> Plus I think it would serve as information leak to information 
> >> outside of the container.
> >> 
> >> An operation to get a user namespace file descriptor from some kernel
> >> object sounds reasonably sane.
> >> 
> >> A great big list of things sounds about as scary as it can get.  This 
> >> is not the time to be making it easier to escape from containers.
> >
> > To be honest, I think this argument is rubbish.  If we're afraid of
> > giving out a list of all the namespaces, it means we're afraid there's
> > some security bug and we're trying to obscure it by making the list
> > hard to get.  All we've done is allayed fears about the bug but the
> > hackers still know the portals to get through.
> >
> > If such a bug exists, it will be possible to exploit it by simply
> > reconstructing the information from the individual process directories,
> > so obscurity doesn't protect us and all it does is give us a false
> > sense of security.   If such a bug doesn't exist, then all the security
> > mechanisms currently in place (like no re-entry to prior namespace)
> > should protect us and we can give out the list.
> >
> > Let's deal with the world as we'd like it to be (no obscure namespace
> > bugs) and accept the consequences and the responsibility for fixing
> > them if we turn out to be slightly incorrect.  We'll end up in a far
> > better place than security by obscurity would land us.
> 
> No.  That is not the fear.  The permission checks on /proc/self/ns/xxx
> are different than if the namespace is bind mounted somewhere.
> 
> That was done deliberately and with a reasonable amount of forethought.
> You are asking to throw those permission checks out.   The answer is no.
> 
> Furthermore there is a much clearer reason not to go with a list of all
> namespaces. A list of all namespaces breaks CRIU.  As you have described
> it the list will change depending upon which machine you restore a
> checkpoint on.  I honestly don't know what kind of havoc that will cause
> but it is certainly something we won't be able to checkpoint no matter
> how hard we try.

It's right. I hadn't thought about this.

> 
> A global list of namespaces especially of the kind that you can open
> and get a handle to the namespace is just not appropriate.
> 
> I know inode numbers comes darn close to names but they aren't really
> names and if it comes to it we can figure out how to preserve an
> applications view of it all across a checkpoint/restart.  So far it
> hasn't proven necessary to preserve any inode numbers across
> checkpoint/restart but again it is theoretically possible if it becomes
> necessary.
> 
> Throwing away checkpoint/restart support for the sake of
> checkpoint/restart is a no-go.
> 
> Containers fundamentally imply you don't have global visibility,
> and that is a good thing.

All these thoughts about security make me thinking that kcmp is what we
should use here. It's maybe something like this:

kcmp(pid1, pid2, KCMP_NS_USERNS, fd1, fd2)

- to check if userns of the fd1 namepsace is equal to the fd2 userns

kcmp(pid1, pid2, KCMP_NS_PARENT, fd1, fd2)

- to check if a parent namespace of the fd1 pidns is equal to fd pidns.

fd1 and fd2 is file descriptors to namespace files.

So if we want to build a hierarchy, we need to collect all namespaces
and then enumerate them to check dependencies with help of kcmp.

> 
> Eric

  reply	other threads:[~2016-07-09  7:41 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 46+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
     [not found] <c2a26220-69f2-f2f5-491a-e43abd9a6f92@gmail.com>
     [not found] ` <87r3b7pxja.fsf@x220.int.ebiederm.org>
2016-07-06  8:41   ` Introspecting userns relationships to other namespaces? Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
2016-07-06 14:13     ` Serge E. Hallyn
2016-07-06 15:46       ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-08  1:57         ` [CRIU] " Andrew Vagin
2016-07-08  7:44           ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-08 14:35             ` James Bottomley
2016-07-08 20:38               ` Andrew Vagin
2016-07-08 20:50                 ` W. Trevor King
2016-07-08 22:19                 ` James Bottomley
2016-07-08 22:19                 ` James Bottomley
2016-07-08 23:52                   ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-09  0:15                     ` James Bottomley
2016-07-09  3:05                       ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-09  7:26                         ` Andrew Vagin [this message]
2016-07-09 10:31                           ` James Bottomley
2016-07-09 10:32                           ` James Bottomley
2016-07-09 18:15                           ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-09 18:29                             ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-13  0:08                               ` Andrew Vagin
2016-07-13  3:59                                 ` W. Trevor King
2016-07-07  8:15       ` Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
2016-07-07 13:36         ` Serge E. Hallyn
2016-07-07 15:01           ` James Bottomley
2016-07-07 18:21             ` Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
2016-07-07 18:24               ` Serge E. Hallyn
2016-07-07 19:17               ` James Bottomley
2016-07-08  2:16                 ` [CRIU] " Andrew Vagin
2016-07-08  3:00                   ` Andrew Vagin
2016-07-08  3:26                     ` James Bottomley
2016-07-08  5:26                       ` W. Trevor King
2016-07-08  6:16                         ` W. Trevor King
2016-07-08  6:54                         ` Andrew Vagin
2016-07-08  7:18                           ` W. Trevor King
2016-07-08  5:41                       ` [CRIU] " Andrei Vagin
2016-07-08  5:47                         ` Andrei Vagin
2016-07-08  6:07                         ` James Bottomley
2016-07-08 11:17                       ` Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
2016-07-08  3:20                   ` James Bottomley
2016-07-08  6:09                     ` Andrew Vagin
2016-07-08 11:11                 ` Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
2016-07-09  3:15             ` W. Trevor King
2016-07-09  3:13               ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-10  5:36                 ` [CRIU] " Andrew Vagin
2016-07-10 20:29                   ` Eric W. Biederman
2016-07-10 21:06                     ` James Bottomley
2016-07-11 20:55                       ` Andrew Vagin

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