Message ID | 20210316204252.427806-1-mic@digikod.net (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | Landlock LSM | expand |
I've queued this patchset here: git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jmorris/linux-security.git landlock_lsm and pulled it into next-testing, which will get it coverage in linux-next. All going well, I'll aim to push this to Linus in the next merge window. More review and testing during that time will be helpful.
On 19/03/2021 00:26, James Morris wrote: > I've queued this patchset here: > > git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jmorris/linux-security.git landlock_lsm > > and pulled it into next-testing, which will get it coverage in linux-next. > > All going well, I'll aim to push this to Linus in the next merge window. > More review and testing during that time will be helpful. Good, thanks! The syzkaller changes are now merged and up-to-date with linux-next: https://github.com/google/syzkaller/commits/3d01c4de549b4e4bddba6102715c212bbcff2fbb
On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 09:42:50PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: > From: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> > > Test all Landlock system calls, ptrace hooks semantic and filesystem > access-control with multiple layouts. > > Test coverage for security/landlock/ is 93.6% of lines. The code not > covered only deals with internal kernel errors (e.g. memory allocation) > and race conditions. > > Cc: James Morris <jmorris@namei.org> > Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com> > Cc: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> > Cc: Serge E. Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com> > Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> > Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> > Reviewed-by: Vincent Dagonneau <vincent.dagonneau@ssi.gouv.fr> > Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210316204252.427806-11-mic@digikod.net This is terrific. I love the coverage. How did you measure this, BTW? To increase it into memory allocation failures, have you tried allocation fault injection: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/fault-injection/fault-injection.html > [...] > +TEST(inconsistent_attr) { > + const long page_size = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE); > + char *const buf = malloc(page_size + 1); > + struct landlock_ruleset_attr *const ruleset_attr = (void *)buf; > + > + ASSERT_NE(NULL, buf); > + > + /* Checks copy_from_user(). */ > + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 0, 0)); > + /* The size if less than sizeof(struct landlock_attr_enforce). */ > + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); > + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 1, 0)); > + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); Almost everywhere you're using ASSERT instead of EXPECT. Is this correct (in the sense than as soon as an ASSERT fails the rest of the test is skipped)? I do see you using EXPECT is some places, but I figured I'd ask about the intention here. > +/* > + * TEST_F_FORK() is useful when a test drop privileges but the corresponding > + * FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() requires them (e.g. to remove files from a directory > + * where write actions are denied). For convenience, FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() is > + * also called when the test failed, but not when FIXTURE_SETUP() failed. For > + * this to be possible, we must not call abort() but instead exit smoothly > + * (hence the step print). > + */ Hm, interesting. I think this should be extracted into a separate patch and added to the test harness proper. Could this be solved with TEARDOWN being called on SETUP failure? > +#define TEST_F_FORK(fixture_name, test_name) \ > + static void fixture_name##_##test_name##_child( \ > + struct __test_metadata *_metadata, \ > + FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) *self, \ > + const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) *variant); \ > + TEST_F(fixture_name, test_name) \ > + { \ > + int status; \ > + const pid_t child = fork(); \ > + if (child < 0) \ > + abort(); \ > + if (child == 0) { \ > + _metadata->no_print = 1; \ > + fixture_name##_##test_name##_child(_metadata, self, variant); \ > + if (_metadata->skip) \ > + _exit(255); \ > + if (_metadata->passed) \ > + _exit(0); \ > + _exit(_metadata->step); \ > + } \ > + if (child != waitpid(child, &status, 0)) \ > + abort(); \ > + if (WIFSIGNALED(status) || !WIFEXITED(status)) { \ > + _metadata->passed = 0; \ > + _metadata->step = 1; \ > + return; \ > + } \ > + switch (WEXITSTATUS(status)) { \ > + case 0: \ > + _metadata->passed = 1; \ > + break; \ > + case 255: \ > + _metadata->passed = 1; \ > + _metadata->skip = 1; \ > + break; \ > + default: \ > + _metadata->passed = 0; \ > + _metadata->step = WEXITSTATUS(status); \ > + break; \ > + } \ > + } \ This looks like a subset of __wait_for_test()? Could __TEST_F_IMPL() be updated instead to do this? (Though the fork overhead might not be great for everyone.)
On 19/03/2021 18:56, Kees Cook wrote: > On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 09:42:50PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: >> From: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> >> >> Test all Landlock system calls, ptrace hooks semantic and filesystem >> access-control with multiple layouts. >> >> Test coverage for security/landlock/ is 93.6% of lines. The code not >> covered only deals with internal kernel errors (e.g. memory allocation) >> and race conditions. >> >> Cc: James Morris <jmorris@namei.org> >> Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com> >> Cc: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> >> Cc: Serge E. Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com> >> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> >> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> >> Reviewed-by: Vincent Dagonneau <vincent.dagonneau@ssi.gouv.fr> >> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210316204252.427806-11-mic@digikod.net > > This is terrific. I love the coverage. How did you measure this, BTW? I used gcov: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/dev-tools/gcov.html > To increase it into memory allocation failures, have you tried > allocation fault injection: > https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/fault-injection/fault-injection.html Yes, it is used by syzkaller, but I don't know how to extract this specific coverage. > >> [...] >> +TEST(inconsistent_attr) { >> + const long page_size = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE); >> + char *const buf = malloc(page_size + 1); >> + struct landlock_ruleset_attr *const ruleset_attr = (void *)buf; >> + >> + ASSERT_NE(NULL, buf); >> + >> + /* Checks copy_from_user(). */ >> + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 0, 0)); >> + /* The size if less than sizeof(struct landlock_attr_enforce). */ >> + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); >> + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 1, 0)); >> + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); > > Almost everywhere you're using ASSERT instead of EXPECT. Is this correct > (in the sense than as soon as an ASSERT fails the rest of the test is > skipped)? I do see you using EXPECT is some places, but I figured I'd > ask about the intention here. I intentionally use ASSERT as much as possible, but I use EXPECT when an error could block a test or when it could stop a cleanup (i.e. teardown). > >> +/* >> + * TEST_F_FORK() is useful when a test drop privileges but the corresponding >> + * FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() requires them (e.g. to remove files from a directory >> + * where write actions are denied). For convenience, FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() is >> + * also called when the test failed, but not when FIXTURE_SETUP() failed. For >> + * this to be possible, we must not call abort() but instead exit smoothly >> + * (hence the step print). >> + */ > > Hm, interesting. I think this should be extracted into a separate patch > and added to the test harness proper. I agree, but it may require some modifications to fit nicely in kselftest_harness.h . For now, it works well for my use case. I'll send patches once Landlock is merged. In fact, I already made kselftest_harness.h available for other users than seccomp. ;) > > Could this be solved with TEARDOWN being called on SETUP failure? The goal of this helper is to still be able to call TEARDOWN when TEST failed, not SETUP. > >> +#define TEST_F_FORK(fixture_name, test_name) \ >> + static void fixture_name##_##test_name##_child( \ >> + struct __test_metadata *_metadata, \ >> + FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) *self, \ >> + const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) *variant); \ >> + TEST_F(fixture_name, test_name) \ >> + { \ >> + int status; \ >> + const pid_t child = fork(); \ >> + if (child < 0) \ >> + abort(); \ >> + if (child == 0) { \ >> + _metadata->no_print = 1; \ >> + fixture_name##_##test_name##_child(_metadata, self, variant); \ >> + if (_metadata->skip) \ >> + _exit(255); \ >> + if (_metadata->passed) \ >> + _exit(0); \ >> + _exit(_metadata->step); \ >> + } \ >> + if (child != waitpid(child, &status, 0)) \ >> + abort(); \ >> + if (WIFSIGNALED(status) || !WIFEXITED(status)) { \ >> + _metadata->passed = 0; \ >> + _metadata->step = 1; \ >> + return; \ >> + } \ >> + switch (WEXITSTATUS(status)) { \ >> + case 0: \ >> + _metadata->passed = 1; \ >> + break; \ >> + case 255: \ >> + _metadata->passed = 1; \ >> + _metadata->skip = 1; \ >> + break; \ >> + default: \ >> + _metadata->passed = 0; \ >> + _metadata->step = WEXITSTATUS(status); \ >> + break; \ >> + } \ >> + } \ > > This looks like a subset of __wait_for_test()? Could __TEST_F_IMPL() be > updated instead to do this? (Though the fork overhead might not be great > for everyone.) Yes, it will probably be my approach to update kselftest_harness.h .
On Fri, Mar 19, 2021 at 07:41:00PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: > > On 19/03/2021 18:56, Kees Cook wrote: > > On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 09:42:50PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: > >> From: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> > >> > >> Test all Landlock system calls, ptrace hooks semantic and filesystem > >> access-control with multiple layouts. > >> > >> Test coverage for security/landlock/ is 93.6% of lines. The code not > >> covered only deals with internal kernel errors (e.g. memory allocation) > >> and race conditions. > >> > >> Cc: James Morris <jmorris@namei.org> > >> Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com> > >> Cc: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> > >> Cc: Serge E. Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com> > >> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> > >> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> > >> Reviewed-by: Vincent Dagonneau <vincent.dagonneau@ssi.gouv.fr> > >> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210316204252.427806-11-mic@digikod.net > > > > This is terrific. I love the coverage. How did you measure this, BTW? > > I used gcov: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/dev-tools/gcov.html > > > To increase it into memory allocation failures, have you tried > > allocation fault injection: > > https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/fault-injection/fault-injection.html > > Yes, it is used by syzkaller, but I don't know how to extract this > specific coverage. > > > > >> [...] > >> +TEST(inconsistent_attr) { > >> + const long page_size = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE); > >> + char *const buf = malloc(page_size + 1); > >> + struct landlock_ruleset_attr *const ruleset_attr = (void *)buf; > >> + > >> + ASSERT_NE(NULL, buf); > >> + > >> + /* Checks copy_from_user(). */ > >> + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 0, 0)); > >> + /* The size if less than sizeof(struct landlock_attr_enforce). */ > >> + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); > >> + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 1, 0)); > >> + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); > > > > Almost everywhere you're using ASSERT instead of EXPECT. Is this correct > > (in the sense than as soon as an ASSERT fails the rest of the test is > > skipped)? I do see you using EXPECT is some places, but I figured I'd > > ask about the intention here. > > I intentionally use ASSERT as much as possible, but I use EXPECT when an > error could block a test or when it could stop a cleanup (i.e. teardown). Okay. Does the test suite run sanely when landlock is missing from the kernel? > > > >> +/* > >> + * TEST_F_FORK() is useful when a test drop privileges but the corresponding > >> + * FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() requires them (e.g. to remove files from a directory > >> + * where write actions are denied). For convenience, FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() is > >> + * also called when the test failed, but not when FIXTURE_SETUP() failed. For > >> + * this to be possible, we must not call abort() but instead exit smoothly > >> + * (hence the step print). > >> + */ > > > > Hm, interesting. I think this should be extracted into a separate patch > > and added to the test harness proper. > > I agree, but it may require some modifications to fit nicely in > kselftest_harness.h . For now, it works well for my use case. I'll send > patches once Landlock is merged. In fact, I already made > kselftest_harness.h available for other users than seccomp. ;) Fair points. > > > > Could this be solved with TEARDOWN being called on SETUP failure? > > The goal of this helper is to still be able to call TEARDOWN when TEST > failed, not SETUP. > > > > >> +#define TEST_F_FORK(fixture_name, test_name) \ > >> + static void fixture_name##_##test_name##_child( \ > >> + struct __test_metadata *_metadata, \ > >> + FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) *self, \ > >> + const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) *variant); \ > >> + TEST_F(fixture_name, test_name) \ > >> + { \ > >> + int status; \ > >> + const pid_t child = fork(); \ > >> + if (child < 0) \ > >> + abort(); \ > >> + if (child == 0) { \ > >> + _metadata->no_print = 1; \ > >> + fixture_name##_##test_name##_child(_metadata, self, variant); \ > >> + if (_metadata->skip) \ > >> + _exit(255); \ > >> + if (_metadata->passed) \ > >> + _exit(0); \ > >> + _exit(_metadata->step); \ > >> + } \ > >> + if (child != waitpid(child, &status, 0)) \ > >> + abort(); \ > >> + if (WIFSIGNALED(status) || !WIFEXITED(status)) { \ > >> + _metadata->passed = 0; \ > >> + _metadata->step = 1; \ > >> + return; \ > >> + } \ > >> + switch (WEXITSTATUS(status)) { \ > >> + case 0: \ > >> + _metadata->passed = 1; \ > >> + break; \ > >> + case 255: \ > >> + _metadata->passed = 1; \ > >> + _metadata->skip = 1; \ > >> + break; \ > >> + default: \ > >> + _metadata->passed = 0; \ > >> + _metadata->step = WEXITSTATUS(status); \ > >> + break; \ > >> + } \ > >> + } \ > > > > This looks like a subset of __wait_for_test()? Could __TEST_F_IMPL() be > > updated instead to do this? (Though the fork overhead might not be great > > for everyone.) > > Yes, it will probably be my approach to update kselftest_harness.h . It seems like this would be named better as TEST_DROPS_PRIVS or something, which describes the reason for the fork.
On 19/03/2021 20:11, Kees Cook wrote: > On Fri, Mar 19, 2021 at 07:41:00PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: >> >> On 19/03/2021 18:56, Kees Cook wrote: >>> On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 09:42:50PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: >>>> From: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> >>>> >>>> Test all Landlock system calls, ptrace hooks semantic and filesystem >>>> access-control with multiple layouts. >>>> >>>> Test coverage for security/landlock/ is 93.6% of lines. The code not >>>> covered only deals with internal kernel errors (e.g. memory allocation) >>>> and race conditions. >>>> >>>> Cc: James Morris <jmorris@namei.org> >>>> Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com> >>>> Cc: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> >>>> Cc: Serge E. Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com> >>>> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> >>>> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@linux.microsoft.com> >>>> Reviewed-by: Vincent Dagonneau <vincent.dagonneau@ssi.gouv.fr> >>>> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210316204252.427806-11-mic@digikod.net >>> >>> This is terrific. I love the coverage. How did you measure this, BTW? >> >> I used gcov: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/dev-tools/gcov.html >> >>> To increase it into memory allocation failures, have you tried >>> allocation fault injection: >>> https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/fault-injection/fault-injection.html >> >> Yes, it is used by syzkaller, but I don't know how to extract this >> specific coverage. >> >>> >>>> [...] >>>> +TEST(inconsistent_attr) { >>>> + const long page_size = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE); >>>> + char *const buf = malloc(page_size + 1); >>>> + struct landlock_ruleset_attr *const ruleset_attr = (void *)buf; >>>> + >>>> + ASSERT_NE(NULL, buf); >>>> + >>>> + /* Checks copy_from_user(). */ >>>> + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 0, 0)); >>>> + /* The size if less than sizeof(struct landlock_attr_enforce). */ >>>> + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); >>>> + ASSERT_EQ(-1, landlock_create_ruleset(ruleset_attr, 1, 0)); >>>> + ASSERT_EQ(EINVAL, errno); >>> >>> Almost everywhere you're using ASSERT instead of EXPECT. Is this correct >>> (in the sense than as soon as an ASSERT fails the rest of the test is >>> skipped)? I do see you using EXPECT is some places, but I figured I'd >>> ask about the intention here. >> >> I intentionally use ASSERT as much as possible, but I use EXPECT when an >> error could block a test or when it could stop a cleanup (i.e. teardown). > > Okay. Does the test suite run sanely when landlock is missing from the > kernel? When Landlock is disabled, the tests fail but do not hang. > >>> >>>> +/* >>>> + * TEST_F_FORK() is useful when a test drop privileges but the corresponding >>>> + * FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() requires them (e.g. to remove files from a directory >>>> + * where write actions are denied). For convenience, FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() is >>>> + * also called when the test failed, but not when FIXTURE_SETUP() failed. For >>>> + * this to be possible, we must not call abort() but instead exit smoothly >>>> + * (hence the step print). >>>> + */ >>> >>> Hm, interesting. I think this should be extracted into a separate patch >>> and added to the test harness proper. >> >> I agree, but it may require some modifications to fit nicely in >> kselftest_harness.h . For now, it works well for my use case. I'll send >> patches once Landlock is merged. In fact, I already made >> kselftest_harness.h available for other users than seccomp. ;) > > Fair points. > >>> >>> Could this be solved with TEARDOWN being called on SETUP failure? >> >> The goal of this helper is to still be able to call TEARDOWN when TEST >> failed, not SETUP. >> >>> >>>> +#define TEST_F_FORK(fixture_name, test_name) \ >>>> + static void fixture_name##_##test_name##_child( \ >>>> + struct __test_metadata *_metadata, \ >>>> + FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) *self, \ >>>> + const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) *variant); \ >>>> + TEST_F(fixture_name, test_name) \ >>>> + { \ >>>> + int status; \ >>>> + const pid_t child = fork(); \ >>>> + if (child < 0) \ >>>> + abort(); \ >>>> + if (child == 0) { \ >>>> + _metadata->no_print = 1; \ >>>> + fixture_name##_##test_name##_child(_metadata, self, variant); \ >>>> + if (_metadata->skip) \ >>>> + _exit(255); \ >>>> + if (_metadata->passed) \ >>>> + _exit(0); \ >>>> + _exit(_metadata->step); \ >>>> + } \ >>>> + if (child != waitpid(child, &status, 0)) \ >>>> + abort(); \ >>>> + if (WIFSIGNALED(status) || !WIFEXITED(status)) { \ >>>> + _metadata->passed = 0; \ >>>> + _metadata->step = 1; \ >>>> + return; \ >>>> + } \ >>>> + switch (WEXITSTATUS(status)) { \ >>>> + case 0: \ >>>> + _metadata->passed = 1; \ >>>> + break; \ >>>> + case 255: \ >>>> + _metadata->passed = 1; \ >>>> + _metadata->skip = 1; \ >>>> + break; \ >>>> + default: \ >>>> + _metadata->passed = 0; \ >>>> + _metadata->step = WEXITSTATUS(status); \ >>>> + break; \ >>>> + } \ >>>> + } \ >>> >>> This looks like a subset of __wait_for_test()? Could __TEST_F_IMPL() be >>> updated instead to do this? (Though the fork overhead might not be great >>> for everyone.) >> >> Yes, it will probably be my approach to update kselftest_harness.h . > > It seems like this would be named better as TEST_DROPS_PRIVS or something, > which describes the reason for the fork. Yeah, maybe, we could discuss about that in a dedicated patch series. :)