Richard Guy Briggs <rgb(a)redhat.com> writes:
The purpose is to track namespace instances in use by logged
processes from the
perspective of init_*_ns by logging the namespace IDs (device ID and namespace
inode - offset).
In broad strokes the user interface appears correct.
Things that I see that concern me:
- After Als most recent changes these inodes no longer live in the proc
superblock so the device number reported in these patches is
incorrect.
- I am nervous about audit logs being flooded with users creating lots
of namespaces. But that is more your lookout than mine.
- unshare is not logging when it creates new namespaces.
As small numbers are nice and these inodes all live in their own
superblock now we should be able to remove the games with
PROC_DYNAMIC_FIRST and just use small numbers for these inodes
everywhere.
I have answered your comments below.
1/10 exposes proc's ns entries structure which lists a number of
useful
operations per namespace type for other subsystems to use.
2/10 proc_ns: define PROC_*_INIT_INO in terms of PROC_DYNAMIC_FIRST
3/10 provides an example of usage for audit_log_task_info() which is used by
syscall audits, among others. audit_log_task() and audit_common_recv_message()
would be other potential use cases.
Proposed output format:
This differs slightly from Aristeu's patch because of the label conflict with
"pid=" due to including it in existing records rather than it being a seperate
record. It has now returned to being a seperate record. The proc device
major/minor are listed in hexadecimal and namespace IDs are the proc inode
minus the base offset.
type=NS_INFO msg=audit(1408577535.306:82): dev=00:03 netns=3 utsns=-3 ipcns=-4 pidns=-1
userns=-2 mntns=0
4/10 change audit startup from __initcall to subsys_initcall to get it started
earlier to be able to receive initial namespace log messages.
5/10 tracks the creation and deletion of namespaces, listing the type of
namespace instance, proc device ID, related namespace id if there is one and
the newly minted namespace ID.
Proposed output format for initial namespace creation:
type=AUDIT_NS_INIT_UTS msg=audit(1408577534.868:5): pid=1 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=kernel dev=00:03 old_utsns=(none) utsns=-3 res=1
type=AUDIT_NS_INIT_USER msg=audit(1408577534.868:6): pid=1 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=kernel dev=00:03 old_userns=(none) userns=-2 res=1
type=AUDIT_NS_INIT_PID msg=audit(1408577534.868:7): pid=1 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=kernel dev=00:03 old_pidns=(none) pidns=-1 res=1
type=AUDIT_NS_INIT_MNT msg=audit(1408577534.868:8): pid=1 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=kernel dev=00:03 old_mntns=(none) mntns=0 res=1
type=AUDIT_NS_INIT_IPC msg=audit(1408577534.868:9): pid=1 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=kernel dev=00:03 old_ipcns=(none) ipcns=-4 res=1
type=AUDIT_NS_INIT_NET msg=audit(1408577533.500:10): pid=1 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=kernel dev=00:03 old_netns=(none) netns=2 res=1
And a CLONE action would result in:
type=type=AUDIT_NS_INIT_NET msg=audit(1408577535.306:81): pid=481 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=system_u:system_r:init_t:s0 dev=00:03 old_netns=2 netns=3 res=1
While deleting a namespace would result in:
type=type=AUDIT_NS_DEL_MNT msg=audit(1408577552.221:85): pid=481 uid=0 auid=4294967295
ses=4294967295 subj=system_u:system_r:init_t:s0 dev=00:03 mntns=4 res=1
6/10 accepts a PID from userspace and requests logging an AUDIT_NS_INFO record
type (CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL required).
7/10 is a macro for CLONE_NEW_* flags.
8/10 adds auditing on creation of namespace(s) in fork.
9/10 adds auditing a change of namespace on setns.
10/10 attaches a AUDIT_NS_INFO record to AUDIT_VIRT_CONTROL records
(CAP_AUDIT_WRITE required).
v5 -> v6:
Switch to using namespace ID based on namespace proc inode minus base offset
Added proc device ID to qualify proc inode reference
Eliminate exposed /proc interface
v4 -> v5:
Clean up prototypes for dependencies on CONFIG_NAMESPACES.
Add AUDIT_NS_INFO record type to AUDIT_VIRT_CONTROL record.
Log AUDIT_NS_INFO with PID.
Move /proc/<pid>/ns_* patches to end of patchset to deprecate them.
Log on changing ns (setns).
Log on creating new namespaces when forking.
Added a macro for CLONE_NEW*.
v3 -> v4:
Seperate out the NS_INFO message from the SYSCALL message.
Moved audit_log_namespace_info() out of audit_log_task_info().
Use a seperate message type per namespace type for each of INIT/DEL.
Make ns= easier to search across NS_INFO and NS_INIT/DEL_XXX msg types.
Add /proc/<pid>/ns/ documentation.
Fix dynamic initial ns logging.
v2 -> v3:
Use atomic64_t in ns_serial to simplify it.
Avoid funciton duplication in proc, keying on dentry.
Squash down audit patch to avoid rcu sleep issues.
Add tracking for creation and deletion of namespace instances.
v1 -> v2:
Avoid rollover by switching from an int to a long long.
Change rollover behaviour from simply avoiding zero to raising a BUG.
Expose serial numbers in /proc/<pid>/ns/*_snum.
Expose ns_entries and use it in audit.
Notes:
As for CAP_AUDIT_READ, a patchset has been accepted upstream to check
capabilities of userspace processes that try to join netlink broadcast groups.
This set does not try to solve the non-init namespace audit messages and
auditd problem yet. That will come later, likely with additional auditd
instances running in another namespace with a limited ability to influence the
master auditd. I echo Eric B's idea that messages destined for different
namespaces would have to be tailored for that namespace with references that
make sense (such as the right pid number reported to that pid namespace, and
not leaking info about parents or peers).
Questions:
Is there a way to link serial numbers of namespaces involved in migration of a
container to another kernel? It sounds like what is needed is a part of a
mangement application that is able to pull the audit records from constituent
hosts to build an audit trail of a container.
I honestly don't know how much we are going to care about namespace ids
during migration. So far this is not a problem that has come up.
I don't think migration becomes a practical concern (other than
interface wise) until achieve a non-init namespace auditd. The easy way
to handle migration would be to log a setns of every process from their
old namespaces to their new namespaces. As you appear to have a setns
event defined.
How to handle the more general case beyond audit remains unclear. I
think it will be a little while yet before we start dealing with
migrating applications that care. When we do we will either need to
generate some kind of hot-plug event that userspace can respond to and
discover all of the appropriate file-system nodes have changed, or we
will need to build a mechanism in the kernel to preserve these numbers.
I really don't know which solution we will wind up with in the kernel at
this point.
What additional events should list this information?
At least unshare.
Does this present any problematic information leaks? Only
CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL
(and now CAP_AUDIT_READ) in init_user_ns can get to this information in
the init namespace at the moment from audit.
Good question. Today access to this information is generally guarded
with CAP_SYS_PTRACE.
I suspect for some of audits tracing features like this one we should
also use CAP_SYS_PTRACE so that we have a consistent set of checks for
getting information about applications.
Eric
Richard Guy Briggs (10):
namespaces: expose ns_entries
proc_ns: define PROC_*_INIT_INO in terms of PROC_DYNAMIC_FIRST
audit: log namespace ID numbers
audit: initialize at subsystem time rather than device time
audit: log creation and deletion of namespace instances
audit: dump namespace IDs for pid on receipt of AUDIT_NS_INFO
sched: add a macro to ref all CLONE_NEW* flags
fork: audit on creation of new namespace(s)
audit: log on switching namespace (setns)
audit: emit AUDIT_NS_INFO record with AUDIT_VIRT_CONTROL record
fs/namespace.c | 13 +++
fs/proc/generic.c | 3 +-
fs/proc/namespaces.c | 2 +-
include/linux/audit.h | 20 +++++
include/linux/proc_ns.h | 10 ++-
include/uapi/linux/audit.h | 21 +++++
include/uapi/linux/sched.h | 6 ++
ipc/namespace.c | 12 +++
kernel/audit.c | 169 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
kernel/auditsc.c | 2 +
kernel/fork.c | 3 +
kernel/nsproxy.c | 4 +
kernel/pid_namespace.c | 13 +++
kernel/user_namespace.c | 13 +++
kernel/utsname.c | 12 +++
net/core/net_namespace.c | 12 +++
security/integrity/ima/ima_api.c | 2 +
17 files changed, 309 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)