Re: [PATCH] mm: optionally disable brk()

From: Topi Miettinen
Date: Sun Nov 01 2020 - 06:41:41 EST


On 5.10.2020 15.18, David Hildenbrand wrote:
On 05.10.20 13:21, David Laight wrote:
From: David Hildenbrand
Sent: 05 October 2020 10:55
...
If hardening and compatibility are seen as tradeoffs, perhaps there
could be a top level config choice (CONFIG_HARDENING_TRADEOFF) for this.
It would have options
- "compatibility" (default) to gear questions for maximum compatibility,
deselecting any hardening options which reduce compatibility
- "hardening" to gear questions for maximum hardening, deselecting any
compatibility options which reduce hardening
- "none/manual": ask all questions like before

I think the general direction is to avoid an exploding set of config
options. So if there isn't a *real* demand, I guess gluing this to a
single option ("CONFIG_SECURITY_HARDENING") might be good enough.

Wouldn't that be better achieved by run-time clobbering
of the syscall vectors?

You mean via something like a boot parameter? Possibly yes.


This may be obvious, but a global seccomp filter which doesn't affect NNP can be installed in initrd with a simple program with no changes to kernel:

#include <errno.h>
#include <seccomp.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
if (argc < 3) {
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s syscall [syscall]... program\n", argv[0]);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

scmp_filter_ctx ctx = seccomp_init(SCMP_ACT_ALLOW);

if (ctx == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "failed to init filter\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

int r;
r = seccomp_attr_set(ctx, SCMP_FLTATR_CTL_NNP, 0);
if (r != 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "failed to disable NNP\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

fprintf(stderr, "filtering");
for (int i = 1; i < argc - 1; i++) {
const char *syscall = argv[i];

int syscall_nr = seccomp_syscall_resolve_name(syscall);

if (syscall_nr == __NR_SCMP_ERROR) {
//fprintf(stderr, "unknown syscall %s, ignoring\n", syscall);
continue;
}
r = seccomp_rule_add_exact(ctx, SCMP_ACT_ERRNO(ENOSYS), syscall_nr, 0);
if (r != 0) {
//fprintf(stderr, "failed to filter syscall %s, ignoring\n", syscall);
continue;
}
fprintf(stderr, " %s", syscall);
}
fprintf(stderr, "\n");
r = seccomp_load(ctx);
if (r != 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "failed to apply filter\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

seccomp_release(ctx);

char *program = argv[argc - 1];
char *new_argv[] = { program, NULL };

execv(program, new_argv);

fprintf(stderr, "failed to exec %s\n", program);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

This can be inserted in initrd to disable some obsolete and old system calls like this:
#!/bin/sh

exec /usr/local/sbin/seccomp-exec _sysctl afs_syscall bdflush break create_module ftime get_kernel_syms getpmsg gtty idle lock mpx prof profil putpmsg query_module security sgetmask ssetmask stty sysfs tuxcall ulimit uselib ustat vserver epoll_ctl_old epoll_wait_old old_adjtimex old_getpagesize oldfstat oldlstat oldolduname oldstat oldumount olduname osf_old_creat osf_old_fstat osf_old_getpgrp osf_old_killpg osf_old_lstat osf_old_open osf_old_sigaction osf_old_sigblock osf_old_sigreturn osf_old_sigsetmask osf_old_sigvec osf_old_stat osf_old_vadvise osf_old_vtrace osf_old_wait osf_oldquota vm86old brk /init

-Topi