On Fri, Apr 7, 2017 at 3:16 PM, Tyler Hicks <tyhicks(a)canonical.com> wrote:
On 02/22/2017 12:46 PM, Kees Cook wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 16, 2017 at 3:29 PM, Kees Cook <keescook(a)chromium.org> wrote:
>> On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 7:24 PM, Andy Lutomirski <luto(a)amacapital.net>
wrote:
>>> On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 7:45 PM, Tyler Hicks <tyhicks(a)canonical.com>
wrote:
>>>> This patch set is the third revision of the following two previously
>>>> submitted patch sets:
>>>>
>>>> v1:
http://lkml.kernel.org/r/1483375990-14948-1-git-send-email-tyhicks@canoni...
>>>> v1:
http://lkml.kernel.org/r/1483377999-15019-2-git-send-email-tyhicks@canoni...
>>>>
>>>> v2:
http://lkml.kernel.org/r/1486100262-32391-1-git-send-email-tyhicks@canoni...
>>>>
>>>> The patch set aims to address some known deficiencies in seccomp's
current
>>>> logging capabilities:
>>>>
>>>> 1. Inability to log all filter actions.
>>>> 2. Inability to selectively enable filtering; e.g. devs want noisy
logging,
>>>> users want relative quiet.
>>>> 3. Consistent behavior with audit enabled and disabled.
>>>> 4. Inability to easily develop a filter due to the lack of a
>>>> permissive/complain mode.
>>>
>>> I think I dislike this, but I think my dislikes may be fixable with
>>> minor changes.
>>>
>>> What I dislike is that this mixes app-specific built-in configuration
>>> (seccomp) with global privileged stuff (audit). The result is a
>>> potentially difficult to use situation in which you need to modify an
>>> app to make it loggable (using RET_LOG) and then fiddle with
>>> privileged config (auditctl, etc) to actually see the logs.
>>
>> You make a good point about RET_LOG vs log_max_action. I think making
>> RET_LOG the default value would work for 99% of the cases.
>
> Actually, I take this back: making "log" the default means that
> everything else gets logged too, include "expected" return values like
> errno, trap, etc. I think that would be extremely noisy as a default
> (for upstream or Ubuntu).
>
> Perhaps RET_LOG should unconditionally log? Or maybe the logged
> actions should be a bit field instead of a single value? Then the
> default could be "RET_KILL and RET_LOG", but an admin could switch it
> to just RET_KILL, or even nothing at all? Hmmm...
Hi Kees - my apologies for going quiet on this topic after we spoke
about it more in IRC. I needed to tend to other work but now I'm able to
return to this seccomp logging patch set.
To summarize what we discussed in IRC, the Chrome browser makes
extensive use of RET_ERRNO, RET_TRACE, etc., to sandbox code that may
not ever be adjusted to keep from bump into the sandbox walls.
Therefore, it is unreasonable to enable logging of something like
RET_ERRNO on a system-wide level where Chrome browser is in use.
In contrast, snapd wants to set up "noisier" sandboxes for applications
to make it clear to the developers and the users that the sandboxed
application is bumping into the sandbox walls. Developers will know why
their code may not be working as intended and users will know that the
application is doing things that the platform doesn't agree with. These
sandboxes will end up using RET_ERRNO in the majority of cases.
This means that with the current design of this patch set, Chrome
browser will either be unintentionally spamming the logs or snapd's
sandboxes will be helplessly silent when both Chrome and snapd is
installed at the same time, depending on the admin's preferences.
To bring it back up a level, two applications may have a very different
outlook on how acceptable a given seccomp action is and they may
disagree on whether or not the user/administrator should be informed.
I've been giving thought to the idea of providing a way for the
application setting up the filter to opt into logging of certain
actions. Here's a high level breakdown:
At the risk of overcomplicating things, I think this issue may be a
decent argument for doing something more like what I suggested
earlier: let seccomp users emit loggable things and let their parents
(optionally) catch and handle those things. Then we get real scoping
rather than fiddling with bitmasks and hoping we get what we want to
see without generating massive log spam.
--Andy