On 14/05/05, Nicolas Dichtel wrote:
Le 02/05/2014 16:28, Richard Guy Briggs a ?crit :
>On 14/05/02, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
>>Quoting Richard Guy Briggs (rgb(a)redhat.com):
>>>I saw no replies to my questions when I replied a year after Aris'
posting, so
>>>I don't know if it was ignored or got lost in stale threads:
>>>
https://www.redhat.com/archives/linux-audit/2013-March/msg00020.html
>>>
https://www.redhat.com/archives/linux-audit/2013-March/msg00033.html
>>> (
https://lists.linux-foundation.org/pipermail/containers/2013-March/032063...)
>>>
https://www.redhat.com/archives/linux-audit/2014-January/msg00180.html
>>>
>>>I've tried to answer a number of questions that were raised in that
thread.
>>>
>>>The goal is not quite identical to Aris' patchset.
>>>
>>>The purpose is to track namespaces in use by logged processes from the
>>>perspective of init_*_ns. The first patch defines a function to list them.
>>>The second patch 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.
>>>
>>>Use a serial number per namespace (unique across one boot of one kernel)
>>>instead of the inode number (which is claimed to have had the right to
change
>>>reserved and is not necessarily unique if there is more than one proc fs).
It
>>>could be argued that the inode numbers have now become a defacto interface
and
>>>can't change now, but I'm proposing this approach to see if this
helps address
>>>some of the objections to the earlier patchset.
>>>
>>>There could also have messages added to track the creation and the
destruction
>>>of namespaces, listing the parent for hierarchical namespaces such as pidns,
>>>userns, and listing other ids for non-hierarchical namespaces, as well as
other
>>>information to help identify a namespace.
>>>
>>>There has been some progress made for audit in net namespaces and pid
>>>namespaces since this previous thread. net namespaces are now served as
peers
>>>by one auditd in the init_net namespace with processes in a non-init_net
>>>namespace being able to write records if they are in the init_user_ns and
have
>>>CAP_AUDIT_WRITE. Processes in a non-init_pid_ns can now similarly write
>>>records. As for CAP_AUDIT_READ, I just posted a patchset to check
capabilities
>>>of userspace processes that try to join netlink broadcast groups.
>>>
>>>
>>>Questions:
>>>Is there a way to link serial numbers of namespaces involved in migration of
a
>>>container to another kernel? (I had a brief look at CRIU.) Is there a
unique
>>>identifier for each running instance of a kernel? Or at least some
identifier
>>>within the container migration realm?
>>
>>Eric Biederman has always been adamantly opposed to adding new namespaces
>>of namespaces, so the fact that you're asking this question concerns me.
>
>I have seen that position and I don't fully understand the justification
>for it other than added complexity.
Just FYI, have you seen this thread:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.network/286572/
There is some explanations/examples about this topic.
Thanks for that reference. I read it through, but will need to do so
again to get it to sink in.
Nicolas
- RGB
--
Richard Guy Briggs <rbriggs(a)redhat.com>
Senior Software Engineer, Kernel Security, AMER ENG Base Operating Systems, Red Hat
Remote, Ottawa, Canada
Voice: +1.647.777.2635, Internal: (81) 32635, Alt: +1.613.693.0684x3545