Re: [PATCH 2/2] random: add fork_event sysctl for polling VM forks

From: Alexander Graf
Date: Mon May 02 2022 - 13:59:38 EST



On 02.05.22 18:51, Lennart Poettering wrote:
On Mo, 02.05.22 18:12, Jason A. Donenfeld (Jason@xxxxxxxxx) wrote:

In order to inform userspace of virtual machine forks, this commit adds
a "fork_event" sysctl, which does not return any data, but allows
userspace processes to poll() on it for notification of VM forks.

It avoids exposing the actual vmgenid from the hypervisor to userspace,
in case there is any randomness value in keeping it secret. Rather,
userspace is expected to simply use getrandom() if it wants a fresh
value.
Wouldn't it make sense to expose a monotonic 64bit counter of detected
VM forks since boot through read()? It might be interesting to know
for userspace how many forks it missed the fork events for. Moreover it
might be interesting to userspace to know if any fork happened so far
*at* *all*, by checking if the counter is non-zero.
"Might be interesting" is different from "definitely useful". I'm not
going to add this without a clear use case. This feature is pretty
narrowly scoped in its objectives right now, and I intend to keep it
that way if possible.
Sure, whatever. I mean, if you think it's preferable to have 3 API
abstractions for the same concept each for it's special usecase, then
that's certainly one way to do things. I personally would try to
figure out a modicum of generalization for things like this. But maybe
that' just me…

I can just tell you, that in systemd we'd have a usecase for consuming
such a generation counter: we try to provide stable MAC addresses for
synthetic network interfaces managed by networkd, so we hash them from
/etc/machine-id, but otoh people also want them to change when they
clone their VMs. We could very nicely solve this if we had a
generation counter easily accessible from userspace, that starts at 0
initially. Because then we can hash as we always did when the counter
is zero, but otherwise use something else, possibly hashed from the
generation counter.

But anyway, I understand you are not interested in
generalization/other usecases, so I'll shut up.


Let's not turn this into a pit fight please :). I think it's a good idea to collect the use cases we all have and evaluate whether this patch is a good stepping stone towards the final solution.

At the end of the road, what I would like to see is

1) A way for libraries such as s2n to identify that a clone occurred. Because it's a deep-down library with no access to its own thread or the main loop, it can not rely on poll/select. Mmap of a file however would work great, as you can create transactions on top of a 64bit mmap'ed value for example.

We can have systemd generate and then provide such a file as long as we have an event based notification mechanism.

2) A way to notify larger applications (think Java here) that a system is going to be suspended soon so it can wipe PII before it gets cloned for example.

3) Notifications after clone so applications know they can regenerate VM unique data based on randomness.

For 2 and 3, applications should have native support for these events (think of poll() on the fork file) as well as external script based support (think "invoke systemctl restart smbd.service on clone").



Lennart, looking at the current sysctl proposal, systemd could poll() on the fork file. It would then be able to generate a /run/fork-id file which it can use for the flow above, right?

The sysctl proposal also gives us 3, if we implement the inhibitor proposal [1] in systemd.

That leaves 2, which we don't have a hardware interface for yet. We can still get to at least script level automation with inhibitors and manually triggering a "hey, you'll be suspended soon" event via systemd.

Overall, it sounds to me like the sysctl poll based kernel interface in this patch in combination with systemd inhibitors gives us an answer to most of the flows above.

I can see attractiveness in providing the /run/fork-id directly from the kernel though, to remove the dependency on systemd for poll-less notification of libraries.

Jason, how much complexity would it add to provide an mmap() and read() interface to a fork counter value to the sysctl? Read sounds like a trivial change on top of what you have already, mmap a bit more heavy lift. If we had both, it would allow us to implement a Linux standard fork detect path in libraries that does not rely on systemd.



Alex


[1] https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/20222




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