On Tue, Jul 16, 2019 at 7:47 PM Casey Schaufler <casey(a)schaufler-ca.com> wrote:
On 7/16/2019 4:13 PM, Paul Moore wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 16, 2019 at 6:18 PM Casey Schaufler <casey(a)schaufler-ca.com>
wrote:
>> It sounds as if some variant of the Hideous format:
>>
>> subj=selinux='a:b:c:d',apparmor='z'
>> subj=selinux/a:b:c:d/apparmor/z
>> subj=(selinux)a:b:c:d/(apparmor)z
>>
>> would meet Steve's searchability requirements, but with significant
>> parsing performance penalties.
> I think "hideous format" sums it up nicely. Whatever we choose here
> we are likely going to be stuck with for some time and I'm near to
> 100% that multiplexing the labels onto a single field is going to be a
> disaster.
If the requirement is that subj= be searchable I don't see much of
an alternative to a Hideous format. If we can get past that, and say
that all subj_* have to be searchable we can avoid that set of issues.
Instead of:
s = strstr(source, "subj=")
search_after_subj(s, ...);
This example does a lot of hand waving in search_after_subj(...)
regarding parsing the multiplexed LSM label. Unless we restrict the
LSM label formats (which seems both wrong, and too late IMHO) we have
a parsing nightmare; can you write a safe multiplexed LSM label parser
without knowledge of each LSM label format? Can you do that for each
LSM without knowing their loaded policy? What happens when the policy
and/or label format changes? What happens in a few years when another
LSM is added to the kernel?
we have
s = source
for (i = 0; i < lsm_slots ; i++) {
s = strstr(s, "subj_")
if (!s)
break;
s = search_after_subj_(s, lsm_slot_name[i], ...)
The hand waving here in search_after_subj_(...) is much less;
essentially you just match "subj_X" and then you can take the field
value as the LSM's label without having to know the format, the policy
loaded, etc. It is both safer and doesn't require knowledge of the
LSMs (the LSM "name" can be specified as a parameter to the search
tool).
There's enough ugly to go around either way.
And I'm not partial to either approach, but do would very
much like to get the code done so I can get on to the next
set of amazing challenges.
Oh, and I don't want to pick on subj= as obj= has the exact same issues.
Yes, I stopped talking about both subj and obj some time ago in this
thread because I figure we can use the same approach for both.
--
paul moore
www.paul-moore.com