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From: Chris PeBenito <chpebeni@linux.microsoft.com>
To: William Roberts <bill.c.roberts@gmail.com>,
	Dominick Grift <dominick.grift@defensec.nl>
Cc: Paul Moore <paul@paul-moore.com>,
	Demi Marie Obenour <demiobenour@gmail.com>,
	Stephen Smalley <stephen.smalley.work@gmail.com>,
	Eric Paris <eparis@parisplace.org>,
	SElinux list <selinux@vger.kernel.org>,
	Linux kernel mailing list <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
	selinux-refpolicy@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] SELinux: Always allow FIOCLEX and FIONCLEX
Date: Tue, 8 Feb 2022 10:47:44 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <4be3fef6-63ca-af97-7fc6-d93d85a9b706@linux.microsoft.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAFftDdo9JmbyPzPWRjOYgZBOS9b5d+OGKKf8egS8_ysbbWW87Q@mail.gmail.com>

On 2/8/2022 09:17, William Roberts wrote:
> <snip>
> 
> This is getting too long for me.
> 
>>>
>>> I don't have a strong opinion either way.  If one were to allow this
>>> using a policy rule, it would result in a major policy breakage.  The
>>> rule would turn on extended perm checks across the entire system,
>>> which the SELinux Reference Policy isn't written for.  I can't speak
>>> to the Android policy, but I would imagine it would be the similar
>>> problem there too.
>>
>> Excuse me if I am wrong but AFAIK adding a xperm rule does not turn on
>> xperm checks across the entire system.
> 
> It doesn't as you state below its target + class.
> 
>>
>> If i am not mistaken it will turn on xperm checks only for the
>> operations that have the same source and target/target class.
> 
> That's correct.

Just to clarify (Demi Marie also mentioned this earlier in the thread), 
what I originally meant was how to emulate this patch by using policy 
rules means you need a rule that allows the two ioctls on all domains 
for all objects.  That results in xperms checks enabled everywhere.


>> This is also why i don't (with the exception TIOSCTI for termdev
>> chr_file) use xperms by default.
>>
>> 1. it is really easy to selectively filter ioctls by adding xperm rules
>> for end users (and since ioctls are often device/driver specific they
>> know best what is needed and what not)
> 
>>>>> and FIONCLEX can be trivially bypassed unless fcntl(F_SETFD)
>>
>> 2. if you filter ioctls in upstream policy for example like i do with
>> TIOSCTI using for example (allowx foo bar (ioctl chr_file (not
>> (0xXXXX)))) then you cannot easily exclude additional ioctls later where source is
>> foo and target/tclass is bar/chr_file because there is already a rule in
>> place allowing the ioctl (and you cannot add rules)
> 
> Currently, fcntl flag F_SETFD is never checked, it's silently allowed, but
> the equivalent FIONCLEX and FIOCLEX are checked. So if you wrote policy
> to block the FIO*CLEX flags, it would be bypassable through F_SETFD and
> FD_CLOEXEC. So the patch proposed makes the FIO flags behave like
> F_SETFD. Which means upstream policy users could drop this allow, which
> could then remove the target/class rule and allow all icotls. Which is easy
> to prevent and fix you could be a rule in to allowx 0 as documented in the
> wiki: https://selinuxproject.org/page/XpermRules
> 
> The questions I think we have here are:
> 1. Do we agree that the behavior between SETFD and the FIO flags are equivalent?
>    I think they are.
> 2. Do we want the interfaces to behave the same?
>    I think they should.

If you can bypass FIONCLEX and FIOCLEX checks by F_SETFD and FD_CLOEXEC, 
then I agree that the two FIO checks don't have value and can be skipped 
as F_SETFD is.

> 3. Do upstream users of the policy construct care?
>    The patch is backwards compat, but I don't want their to be cruft
> floating around with extra allowxperm rules.

Reference policy does not have any xperm rules at this time.  I looked 
at the Fedora policy, and that doesn't have any.



-- 
Chris PeBenito

  reply	other threads:[~2022-02-08 15:47 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 32+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2022-01-25 21:34 [PATCH] SELinux: Always allow FIOCLEX and FIONCLEX Demi Marie Obenour
2022-01-25 22:27 ` Paul Moore
2022-01-25 22:50   ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-01-26 22:41     ` Paul Moore
2022-01-30  3:40       ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-02-01 17:26         ` Paul Moore
2022-02-02 10:13           ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-02-03 23:44             ` Paul Moore
2022-02-04 13:48               ` Chris PeBenito
2022-02-05 11:19                 ` Dominick Grift
2022-02-05 13:13                   ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-02-08 14:17                   ` William Roberts
2022-02-08 15:47                     ` Chris PeBenito [this message]
2022-02-08 16:47                       ` Dominick Grift
2022-02-08 23:44                         ` David Laight
2022-02-14  7:11                     ` Jeffrey Vander Stoep
2022-02-15 20:34                       ` Paul Moore
2022-02-17 15:04                         ` Christian Göttsche
2022-02-17 22:25                           ` Paul Moore
2022-02-17 23:55                         ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-02-18 15:06                           ` Richard Haines
2022-02-18 15:39                           ` Richard Haines
2022-02-20  1:15                             ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-02-07 17:00               ` William Roberts
2022-02-07 17:08                 ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-02-07 18:35                   ` William Roberts
2022-02-07 21:12                     ` Demi Marie Obenour
2022-02-07 21:42                       ` William Roberts
2022-02-07 21:50                         ` William Roberts
2022-02-08  0:01                           ` Paul Moore
2022-02-08 14:05                             ` William Roberts
2022-02-08 16:26                               ` Paul Moore

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