I found more inconsistencies:
[...]
case AUDIT_GID:
result = audit_gid_comparator(cred->gid, f->op, f->gid);
if (f->op == Audit_equal) {
if (!result)
result = in_group_p(f->gid);
} else if (f->op == Audit_not_equal) {
if (result)
result = !in_group_p(f->gid);
}
break;
case AUDIT_EGID:
result = audit_gid_comparator(cred->egid, f->op, f->gid);
if (f->op == Audit_equal) {
if (!result)
result = in_egroup_p(f->gid);
} else if (f->op == Audit_not_equal) {
if (result)
result = !in_egroup_p(f->gid);
}
break;
[...]
The in_[e]group_p functions match the current task's group list.
Unfortunately there don't seem to be functions in the kernel that
would do the same for arbitrary struct cred pointers, we may need to
add these to fix this.
See the definition of in_group_p for reference:
https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/kernel/groups.c#L219
2018-05-16 8:57 GMT+02:00 Ondrej Mosnacek <omosnace(a)redhat.com>:
Hi,
I noticed this suspicious line in the definition of the
audit_filter_rules function in auditsc.c:
[...]
case AUDIT_SESSIONID:
sessionid = audit_get_sessionid(current); // <--- HERE
result = audit_comparator(sessionid, f->op, f->val);
break;
[...]
Here, the sessionid is retrieved from the current task pointer, while
all the other code in this function compares against the tsk task
pointer. It seems that it is not always guaranteed that tsk ==
current, so my question is: Is it intentional for some reason or
should it be tsk instead of current?
Thanks,
--
Ondrej Mosnacek <omosnace at redhat dot com>
Associate Software Engineer, Security Technologies
Red Hat, Inc.
--
Ondrej Mosnacek <omosnace at redhat dot com>
Associate Software Engineer, Security Technologies
Red Hat, Inc.