Re: [PATCH 1/3] fs: add O_BENEATH flag to openat(2)

From: David Drysdale
Date: Mon Nov 03 2014 - 12:38:04 EST


On Mon, Nov 3, 2014 at 3:42 PM, Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 3, 2014 at 7:20 AM, Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On Mon, Nov 03, 2014 at 11:48:23AM +0000, David Drysdale wrote:
>>> Add a new O_BENEATH flag for openat(2) which restricts the
>>> provided path, rejecting (with -EACCES) paths that are not beneath
>>> the provided dfd. In particular, reject:
>>> - paths that contain .. components
>>> - paths that begin with /
>>> - symlinks that have paths as above.
>>
>> Yecch... The degree of usefulness aside (and I'm not convinced that it
>> is non-zero),
>
> This is extremely useful in conjunction with seccomp.

Yes, that was my understanding of how the Chrome[OS] folk wanted
to use it.

>> WTF pass one bit out of nameidata->flags in a separate argument?

I'll shift to using nd->flags; not sure what I was thinking of there.

(It *might* have made more sense in the full patchset this was extracted
from but it certainly doesn't look sensible in this narrower context.)

>> Through the mutual recursion, no less... And then you are not even attempting
>> to detect symlinks that are not followed by interpretation of _any_ pathname.
>
> How many symlinks like that are there? Is there anything except
> nd_jump_link users? All of those are in /proc. Arguably O_BENEATH
> should prevent traversal of all of those links.
>
> --Andy

On a quick search, the 2 users of nd_jump_link (namely proc_pid_follow_link
and proc_ns_follow_link) seem to be the only implementations of
inode_operations->follow_link that don't just call nd_set_link(). So
disallowing that for O_BENEATH might give sensible behaviour.
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