On Fri, Nov 1, 2019 at 11:10 AM Richard Guy Briggs <rgb(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On 2019-10-31 10:50, Steve Grubb wrote:
> Hello,
>
> TLDR; I see a lot of benefit to switching away from procfs for setting auid &
> sessionid.
>
> On Wednesday, October 30, 2019 6:03:20 PM EDT Richard Guy Briggs wrote:
> > > Also, for the record, removing the audit loginuid from procfs is not
> > > something to take lightly, if at all; like it or not, it's part of
the
> > > kernel API.
>
> It can also be used by tools to iterate processes related to one user or
> session. I use this in my Intrusion Prevention System which will land in
> audit user space at some point in the future.
>
> > Oh, I'm quite aware of how important this change is and it was discussed
> > with Steve Grubb who saw the concern and value of considering such a
> > disruptive change.
>
> Actually, I advocated for syscall. I think the gist of Eric's idea was that /
> proc is the intersection of many nasty problems. By relying on it, you can't
> simplify the API to reduce the complexity. Almost no program actually needs
> access to /proc. ps does. But almost everything else is happy without it. For
> example, when you setup chroot jails, you may have to add /dev/random or /
> dev/null, but almost never /proc. What does force you to add /proc is any
> entry point daemon like sshd because it needs to set the loginuid. If we
> switch away from /proc, then sshd or crond will no longer /require/ procfs to
> be available which again simplifies the system design.
>
> > Removing proc support for auid/ses would be a
> > long-term deprecation if accepted.
>
> It might need to just be turned into readonly for a while. But then again,
> perhaps auid and session should be part of /proc/<pid>/status? Maybe this can
> be done independently and ahead of the container work so there is a migration
> path for things that read auid or session. TBH, maybe this should have been
> done from the beginning.
How about making loginuid/contid/capcontid writable only via netlink but
still provide the /proc interface for reading? Deprecation of proc can
be left as a decision for later. This way sshd/crond/getty don't need
/proc, but the info is still there for tools that want to read it.
Just so there is no confusion for the next patchset: I think it would
be a mistake to include any changes to loginuid in your next patchset,
even as a "RFC" at the end. Also, barring some shocking comments from
Eric relating to the imminent death of /proc in containers, I think it
would also be a mistake to include the netlink API.
Let's keep it small and focused :)
--
paul moore
www.paul-moore.com