Re: [RFC PATCH v2 20/21] x86: Add support for CONFIG_CFI_CLANG

From: Joao Moreira
Date: Tue May 17 2022 - 04:32:52 EST


Cons:
- FineIBT does callee-based hash verification, which means any
attacker-constructed memory region just has to have an endbr and nops at
"shellcode - 9". KCFI would need the region to have the hash at
"shellcode - 6" and an endbr at "shellcode". However, that hash is well
known, so it's not much protection.

How would you get the ENDBR there anyway? If you can write code it's
game over.

+1 here. If you can't keep W^X, both approaches are equally doomed.

Yet, there is a relevant detail here. ENDBR has a pre-defined/fixed opcode, which means that it is predictable from the binary perspective. Because of that, compilers already do security optimizations and prevent for example the emission of ENDBR's opcode as immediate operands. This very same approach can be used by JIT stuff, preventing ENDBRs to be emitted as unintended gadgets. Because KCFI hashes aren't predictable, you can't (or at least I can't think of a way to) prevent these from being emitted as operands, which means that if you have an IBT-able machine, you will want to enable it even if you have KCFI.

With this said, the instrumentation for KCFI on IBT-enabled machines should be of at least 9 bytes (5 for the hash/mov and 4 for ENDBR, not counting the additional 4 bytes we asked for).

- Potential performance hit due to making an additional "call" outside
the cache lines of both caller and callee.

That was all an effort to shrink and simplify, all this CFI stuff is
massive bloat :/

If we use %eax instead of %r10d for the hash transfer (as per Joao), and
use int3 instead of ud2, then we can shrink the fineibt sequence to:

__cfi_\func:
endbr # 4
xorl $0x12345678, %eax # 5
jz 1f # 2
int3 # 1
\func:
...

Which is 12 bytes, and needs a larger preamble (up from 9 in the current
proposal).

As per the above-analysis, if we can make FineIBT instrumentation fit in 12 bytes, this means that the 9 bytes required for KCFI+IBT plus three bytes would suffice for having FineIBT (again, if we can make it fit). And this would make that call go away.


If we do the objtool/linker fixup, such that direct calls/jumps will
*never* hit ENDBR, then we can do something ugly like:

kCFI FineIBT

__cfi_\func: __cfi_\func:
int3 endbr
movl $0x12345678, %rax xorl $0x12345678, %eax
int3 jz 1f
int3 int3
\func:
endbr
__direct_\func: __direct_\func:
... ...

which is 12 bytes on both sides and shrinks the preaamble to 8 bytes
while additionally also supporting kCFI+IBT for those few people that
don't care about speculation based attacks much.

But now it's complicated again and requires significant tools work :/
(also, using int3 isn't ideal).

Pros:
- FineIBT can be done without read access to the kernel text, which will
be nice in the exec-only future.

- Mostly kills SpectreBHB (because it has the hash check *after*
ENDBR).

- Callee-side checks allow you to make an specific function coarse-grained without making an indirect call instruction coarse-grained. I.e: If you have a binary blob or some function that for whatever reason can't have a hash, you just disable the check in this function, making it reachable by every indirect call in the binary but being reasonably able to measure the risks behind it. If you make an indirect call coarse-grained, this means that now this indirect call can reach all functions in the binary, including functions like "disable_cet" and "disable_super_nice_security_feature". The risk impacts of these latter relaxations are much harder to measure, imho (yet, I would enjoy hearing counter-arguments, if any).


So were IBT limits speculation to all sites that have ENDBR, you can
still target any of them. With FineIBT you loose all sites that don't
match on hash value, significantly reducing the options.

I'd kind of like the "dynamic FineIBT conversion" to be a config option,
at least at first. We could at least do performance comparisons between
them.

Why would you need a config option for that? Since it is dynamic anyway
a boot option works fine.


Also, regardless of all this, it probably makes sense to add an LTO pass
to remove all unused __cfi_ symbols and endbr instructions, less viable
targets is more better :-)

We have that for IBT in clang already (I implemented and upstreamed it back when you were trying ibt-seal in objtool). I did not find the time to test it with the final IBT support but it is in my todo list to take a look and perhaps send a RFC here. FWIIW, https://reviews.llvm.org/D116070


I've been doing that with objtool for the IBT builds.