Re: [kernel-hardening] [PATCH 09/38] usercopy: Mark kmalloc caches as usercopy caches

From: Ursula Braun
Date: Wed Jan 29 2020 - 04:26:25 EST




On 1/29/20 12:01 AM, Kees Cook wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 28, 2020 at 08:58:31AM +0100, Christian Borntraeger wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 28.01.20 00:19, Kees Cook wrote:
>>> On Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 09:14:20AM +0100, Jiri Slaby wrote:
>>>> On 14. 11. 19, 22:27, Kees Cook wrote:
>>>>> On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 01:21:54PM -0800, Kees Cook wrote:
>>>>>> How is iucv the only network protocol that has run into this? Do others
>>>>>> use a bounce buffer?
>>>>>
>>>>> Another solution would be to use a dedicated kmem cache (instead of the
>>>>> shared kmalloc dma one)?
>>>>
>>>> Has there been any conclusion to this thread yet? For the time being, we
>>>> disabled HARDENED_USERCOPY on s390...
>>>>
>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/kernel-hardening/9519edb7-456a-a2fa-659e-3e5a1ff89466@xxxxxxx/
>>>
>>> I haven't heard anything new. What did people think of a separate kmem
>>> cache?
>>>
>>
>> Adding Julian and Ursula. A separate kmem cache for iucv might be indeed
>> a solution for the user hardening issue.
>
> It should be very clean -- any existing kmallocs already have to be
> "special" in the sense that they're marked with the DMA flag. So
> converting these to a separate cache should be mostly mechanical.
>

Linux on System z can run within a guest hosted by the IBM mainframe operating system
z/VM. z/VM offers a transport called Inter-User Communications Vehicle (short IUCV).
It is limited to 4-byte-addresses when sending and receiving data.
One base transport for AF_IUCV sockets in the Linux kernel is this Inter-User
Communications Vehicle of z/VM. AF_IUCV sockets exist for s390 only.

AF_IUCV sockets make use of the base socket layer, and work with sk_buffs for sending
and receiving data of variable length.
Storage for sk_buffs is allocated with __alloc_skb(), which invokes
data = kmalloc_reserve(size, gfp_mask, node, &pfmemalloc);
For IUCV transport the "data"-address should fit into 4 bytes. That's the reason why
we work with GFP_DMA here.

kmem_caches manage memory of fixed size. This does not fit well for sk_buff memory
of variable length. Do you propose to add a kmem_cache solution for sk_buff memory here?

>> On the other hand not marking the DMA caches still seems questionable.
>
> My understanding is that exposing DMA memory to userspace copies can
> lead to unexpected results, especially for misbehaving hardware, so I'm
> not convinced this is a generically bad hardening choice.
>

We have not yet been reported a memory problem here. Do you have more details, if
this is really a problem for the s390 architecture?

Kind regards, Ursula

> -Kees
>
>>
>> For reference
>> https://bugzilla.suse.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1156053
>> the kernel hardening now triggers a warning.
>>
>