On 10/17/2017 5:31 AM, Simo Sorce wrote:
On Mon, 2017-10-16 at 21:42 -0400, Steve Grubb wrote:
> On Monday, October 16, 2017 8:33:40 PM EDT Richard Guy Briggs wrote:
>> There is such a thing, but the kernel doesn't know about it
>> yet. This same situation exists for loginuid and sessionid which
>> are userspace concepts that the kernel tracks for the convenience
>> of userspace. As for its name, I'm not particularly picky, so if
>> you don't like CAP_CONTAINER_* then I'm fine with
>> CAP_AUDIT_CONTAINERID. It really needs to be distinct from
>> CAP_AUDIT_WRITE and CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL since we don't want to give
>> the ability to set a containerID to any process that is able to do
>> audit logging (such as vsftpd) and similarly we don't want to give
>> the orchestrator the ability to control the setup of the audit
>> daemon.
> A long time ago, we were debating what should guard against rouge
> processes from setting the loginuid. Casey argued that the ability to
> set the loginuid means they have the ability to control the audit
> trail. That means that it should be guarded by CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL. I
> think the same logic applies today.
The difference is that with loginuid you needed to give processes able
to audit also the ability to change it. You do not want to tie the
ability to change container ids to the ability to audit. You want to be
able to do audit stuff (within the container) without allowing it to
change the container id.
Without a *kernel* policy on containerIDs you can't say what
security policy is being exempted. Without that you can't say what
capability is (or isn't) appropriate. You need a reason to have
a capability check that makes sense in the context of the kernel
security policy. Since we don't know what a container is in the
kernel, that's pretty hard. We don't create "fuzzy" capabilities
based on the trendy application behavior of the moment. If the
behavior is not related it audit, there's no reason for it, and
if it is, CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL works just fine. If this doesn't work
in your application security model I suggest that is where you
need to make changes.
Of course if we made container id a write-once property maybe there
is
no need for controls at all, but I'm pretty sure there will be
situations where write-once may not be usable in practice.
> The ability to arbitrarily set a container ID means the process has
> the ability to indirectly control the audit trail.
The container Id can be used also for authorization purposes (by other
processes on the host), not just audit, I think this is why a separate
control has been proposed.
Simo.