Re: [PATCH 2/2] PM / Sleep: Check the file capability when writing wake lock interface

From: Jann Horn
Date: Mon Dec 31 2018 - 07:03:13 EST


On Mon, Dec 31, 2018 at 11:41 AM Greg Kroah-Hartman
<gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Dec 31, 2018 at 05:38:51PM +0800, joeyli wrote:
> > Hi Greg,
> >
> > On Sun, Dec 30, 2018 at 03:48:35PM +0100, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
> > > On Sun, Dec 30, 2018 at 09:28:56PM +0800, Lee, Chun-Yi wrote:
> > > > The wake lock/unlock sysfs interfaces check that the writer must has
> > > > CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND capability. But the checking logic can be bypassed
> > > > by opening sysfs file within an unprivileged process and then writing
> > > > the file within a privileged process. The tricking way has been exposed
> > > > by Andy Lutomirski in CVE-2013-1959.
> > >
> > > Don't you mean "open by privileged and then written by unprivileged?"
> > > Or if not, exactly how is this a problem? You check the capabilities
> > > when you do the write and if that is not allowed then, well
> > >
> >
> > Sorry for I didn't provide clear explanation.
> >
> > The privileged means CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND but not file permission. The file permission
> > has already relaxed for non-root user. Then the expected behavior is that non-root
> > process must has CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND capability for writing wake_lock sysfs.
> >
> > But, the CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND restrict can be bypassed:
> >
> > int main(int argc, char* argv[])
> > {
> > int fd, ret = 0;
> >
> > fd = open("/sys/power/wake_lock", O_RDWR);
> > if (fd < 0)
> > err(1, "open wake_lock");
> >
> > if (dup2(fd, 1) != 1) // overwrite the stdout with wake_lock
> > err(1, "dup2");
> > sleep(1);
> > execl("./string", "string"); //string has capability
> >
> > return ret;
> > }
> >
> > This program is an unpriviledged process (has no CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND), it opened
> > wake_lock sysfs and overwrited stdout. Then it executes the "string" program
> > that has CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND.
>
> That's the problem right there, do not give CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND rights to
> "string". If any user can run that program, there's nothing the kernel
> can do about this, right? Just don't allow that program on the system :)
>
> > The string program writes to stdout, which means that it writes to
> > wake_lock. So an unpriviledged opener can trick an priviledged writer
> > for writing sysfs.
>
> That sounds like a userspace program that was somehow given incorrect
> rights by the admin, and a user is taking advantage of it. That's not
> the kernel's fault.

Isn't it? Pretty much any setuid program will write to stdout or
stderr; even the glibc linker code does so if you set LD_DEBUG.
(Normally the output isn't entirely attacker-controlled, but it is in
the case of stuff like "procmail", which I think Debian still ships as
setuid root.) setuid programs should always be able to safely call
read() and write() on caller-provided file descriptors. Also, you're
supposed to be able to receive file descriptors over unix domain
sockets and then write to them without trusting the sender. Basically,
the ->read and ->write VFS handlers should never look at the caller's
credentials, only the opener's (with the exception of LSMs, which tend
to do weird things to the system's security model).