Re: [PATCH 0/9] Devices accessibility control group (v4)

From: Greg KH
Date: Wed Mar 05 2008 - 23:40:30 EST


On Wed, Mar 05, 2008 at 09:15:25PM -0600, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
> Quoting Greg KH (greg@xxxxxxxxx):
> > On Wed, Mar 05, 2008 at 08:23:35PM +0300, Pavel Emelyanov wrote:
> > > Changes from v3:
> > > * Ported on 2.6.25-rc3-mm1;
> > > * Re-splitted into smaller pieces;
> > > * Added more comments to tricky places.
> > >
> > > This controller allows to tune the devices accessibility by tasks,
> > > i.e. grant full access for /dev/null, /dev/zero etc, grant read-only
> > > access to IDE devices and completely hide SCSI disks.
> >
> > From within the kernel itself? The kernel should not be keeping track
> > of the mode of devices, that's what the filesystem holding /dev is for.
> > Those modes change all the time depending on the device plugged in, and
> > the user using the "console". Why should the kernel need to worry about
> > any of this?
>
> These are distinct from the permissions on device files. No matter what
> the permissions on the device files, a task in a devcg cgroup which
> isn't allowed write to chardev 4:64 will not be able to write to
> /dev/ttyS0.

Then why not do that from userspace with a different /dev, or with a
LSM?

> The purpose is to prevent a root task from granting itself access to
> certain devices. Without this, the only option currently is to take
> CAP_MKNOD out of the capability bounding set for a container and make
> sure that /dev is set up right (and enforce nodev for mounts). In
> itself that doesn't sound so bad and it was my preference at first,

that would be my preference as well.

> but the argument is that things like udev should be able to run in a
> container, and will object about not being able to create devices.

No reason you can't modify udev to do something like this. At the
worse, just disable udev warning messages, that is pretty trivial to do.

This really makes it seem like this kernel change is not needed at all.

> > > Tasks still can call mknod to create device files, regardless of
> > > whether the particular device is visible or accessible, but they
> > > may not be able to open it later.
> > >
> > > This one hides under CONFIG_CGROUP_DEVS option.
> > >
> > > To play with it - run a standard procedure:
> > >
> > > # mount -t container none /cont/devs -o devices
> > > # mkdir /cont/devs/0
> > > # echo -n $$ > /cont/devs/0/tasks
> >
> > What is /cont/ for?
>
> cgroups used to be called containers, so 'cont' is presumably shorthand
> for container.
>
> > > and tune device permissions.
> >
> > How is this done?
> >
> > Why would the kernel care about this stuff?
>
> Because there is no way for userspace to restrict a root process in a
> container from accessing whatever devices it wants.

LSM does this quite well today, why reinvent the wheel and put wierd
hooks in other parts of the kernel that do not need them at all?

thanks,

greg k-h
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/