Message ID | 20240220203256.31153-1-mbland@motorola.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | arm64: mm: support dynamic vmalloc/pmd configuration | expand |
Le 20/02/2024 à 21:32, Maxwell Bland a écrit : > [Vous ne recevez pas souvent de courriers de mbland@motorola.com. Découvrez pourquoi ceci est important à https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification ] > > Reworks ARM's virtual memory allocation infrastructure to support > dynamic enforcement of page middle directory PXNTable restrictions > rather than only during the initial memory mapping. Runtime enforcement > of this bit prevents write-then-execute attacks, where malicious code is > staged in vmalloc'd data regions, and later the page table is changed to > make this code executable. > > Previously the entire region from VMALLOC_START to VMALLOC_END was > vulnerable, but now the vulnerable region is restricted to the 2GB > reserved by module_alloc, a region which is generally read-only and more > difficult to inject staging code into, e.g., data must pass the BPF > verifier. These changes also set the stage for other systems, such as > KVM-level (EL2) changes to mark page tables immutable and code page > verification changes, forging a path toward complete mitigation of > kernel exploits on ARM. > > Implementing this required minimal changes to the generic vmalloc > interface in the kernel to allow architecture overrides of some vmalloc > wrapper functions, refactoring vmalloc calls to use a standard interface > in the generic kernel, and passing the address parameter already passed > into PTE allocation to the pte_allocate child function call. > > The new arm64 vmalloc wrapper functions ensure vmalloc data is not > allocated into the region reserved for module_alloc. arm64 BPF and > kprobe code also see a two-line-change ensuring their allocations abide > by the segmentation of code from data. Finally, arm64's pmd_populate > function is modified to set the PXNTable bit appropriately. On powerpc (book3s/32) we have more or less the same although it is not directly linked to PMDs: the virtual 4G address space is split in segments of 256M. On each segment there's a bit called NX to forbit execution. Vmalloc space is allocated in a segment with NX bit set while Module spare is allocated in a segment with NX bit unset. We never have to override vmalloc wrappers. All consumers of exec memory allocate it using module_alloc() while vmalloc() provides non-exec memory. For modules, all you have to do is select ARCH_WANTS_MODULES_DATA_IN_VMALLOC and module data will be allocated using vmalloc() hence non-exec memory in our case. Christophe
Hey Maxwell, FYI: > mm/vmalloc: allow arch-specific vmalloc_node overrides > mm: pgalloc: support address-conditional pmd allocation With these two arch/riscv/configs/* are broken with calls to undeclared functions. > arm64: separate code and data virtual memory allocation > arm64: dynamic enforcement of pmd-level PXNTable And with these two the 32-bit and nommu builds are broken. Cheers, Conor.
> From: Conor Dooley <conor@kernel.org> > FYI: > > > mm/vmalloc: allow arch-specific vmalloc_node overrides > > mm: pgalloc: support address-conditional pmd allocation > > With these two arch/riscv/configs/* are broken with calls to undeclared > functions. Will fix, thanks! I will also figure out how to make sure this doesn't happen again for some other architecture. > > arm64: separate code and data virtual memory allocation > > arm64: dynamic enforcement of pmd-level PXNTable > > And with these two the 32-bit and nommu builds are broken. Was not aware there was a dependency here. I will see what I can do. Thank you, Maxwell
> On Wednesday, February 21, 2024 at 1:32 AM, Christophe Leroy wrote: > > On powerpc (book3s/32) we have more or less the same although it is not > directly linked to PMDs: the virtual 4G address space is split in > segments of 256M. On each segment there's a bit called NX to forbit > execution. Vmalloc space is allocated in a segment with NX bit set while > Module spare is allocated in a segment with NX bit unset. We never have > to override vmalloc wrappers. All consumers of exec memory allocate it > using module_alloc() while vmalloc() provides non-exec memory. > > For modules, all you have to do is select > ARCH_WANTS_MODULES_DATA_IN_VMALLOC and module data will be allocated > using vmalloc() hence non-exec memory in our case. This critique has led me to some valuable ideas, and I can definitely find a simpler approach without overrides. I do want to mention changes to how VMALLOC_* and MODULE_* constants are used on arm64 may introduce other issues. See discussion/code on the patch that motivated this patch at: https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAP5Mv+ydhk=Ob4b40ZahGMgT-5+-VEHxtmA=-LkJiEOOU+K6hw@mail.gmail.com/ In short, maybe the issue of code/data intermixing requires a rework of arm64 memory infrastructure, but I see a potentially elegant solution here based on the comments given on this patch. Thanks, Maxwell
Reworks ARM's virtual memory allocation infrastructure to support dynamic enforcement of page middle directory PXNTable restrictions rather than only during the initial memory mapping. Runtime enforcement of this bit prevents write-then-execute attacks, where malicious code is staged in vmalloc'd data regions, and later the page table is changed to make this code executable. Previously the entire region from VMALLOC_START to VMALLOC_END was vulnerable, but now the vulnerable region is restricted to the 2GB reserved by module_alloc, a region which is generally read-only and more difficult to inject staging code into, e.g., data must pass the BPF verifier. These changes also set the stage for other systems, such as KVM-level (EL2) changes to mark page tables immutable and code page verification changes, forging a path toward complete mitigation of kernel exploits on ARM. Implementing this required minimal changes to the generic vmalloc interface in the kernel to allow architecture overrides of some vmalloc wrapper functions, refactoring vmalloc calls to use a standard interface in the generic kernel, and passing the address parameter already passed into PTE allocation to the pte_allocate child function call. The new arm64 vmalloc wrapper functions ensure vmalloc data is not allocated into the region reserved for module_alloc. arm64 BPF and kprobe code also see a two-line-change ensuring their allocations abide by the segmentation of code from data. Finally, arm64's pmd_populate function is modified to set the PXNTable bit appropriately. Signed-off-by: Maxwell Bland <mbland@motorola.com> --- After Mark Rutland's feedback last week on my more minimal patch, see <CAP5Mv+ydhk=Ob4b40ZahGMgT-5+-VEHxtmA=-LkJiEOOU+K6hw@mail.gmail.com> I adopted a more sweeping and more correct overhaul of ARM's virtual memory allocation infrastructure to support these changes. This patch guarantees our ability to write future systems with a strong and accessible distinction between code and data at the page allocation layer, bolstering the guarantees of complementary contributions, i.e. W^X and kCFI. The current patch minimally reduces available vmalloc space, removing the 2GB that should be reserved for code allocations regardless, and I feel really benefits the kernel by making several memory allocation interfaces more uniform, and providing hooks for non-ARM architectures to follow suit. I have done some minimal runtime testing using Torvald's test-tlb script on a QEMU VM, but maybe more extensive benchmarking is needed? Size: Before Patch -> After Patch 4k: 4.09ns 4.15ns 4.41ns 4.43ns -> 3.68ns 3.73ns 3.67ns 3.73ns 8k: 4.22ns 4.19ns 4.30ns 4.15ns -> 3.99ns 3.89ns 4.12ns 4.04ns 16k: 3.97ns 4.31ns 4.30ns 4.28ns -> 4.03ns 3.98ns 4.06ns 4.06ns 32k: 3.82ns 4.51ns 4.25ns 4.31ns -> 3.99ns 4.09ns 4.07ns 5.17ns 64k: 4.50ns 5.59ns 6.13ns 6.14ns -> 4.23ns 4.26ns 5.91ns 5.93ns 128k: 5.06ns 4.47ns 6.75ns 6.69ns -> 4.47ns 4.71ns 6.54ns 6.44ns 256k: 4.83ns 4.43ns 6.62ns 6.21ns -> 4.39ns 4.62ns 6.71ns 6.65ns 512k: 4.45ns 4.75ns 6.19ns 6.65ns -> 4.86ns 5.26ns 7.77ns 6.68ns 1M: 4.72ns 4.73ns 6.74ns 6.47ns -> 4.29ns 4.45ns 6.87ns 6.59ns 2M: 4.66ns 4.86ns 14.49ns 15.00ns -> 4.53ns 4.57ns 15.91ns 15.90ns 4M: 4.85ns 4.95ns 15.90ns 15.98ns -> 4.48ns 4.74ns 17.27ns 17.36ns 6M: 4.94ns 5.03ns 17.19ns 17.31ns -> 4.70ns 4.93ns 18.02ns 18.23ns 8M: 5.05ns 5.18ns 17.49ns 17.64ns -> 4.96ns 5.07ns 18.84ns 18.72ns 16M: 5.55ns 5.79ns 20.99ns 23.70ns -> 5.46ns 5.72ns 22.76ns 26.51ns 32M: 8.54ns 9.06ns 124.61ns 125.07ns -> 8.43ns 8.59ns 116.83ns 138.83ns 64M: 8.42ns 8.63ns 196.17ns 204.52ns -> 8.26ns 8.43ns 193.49ns 203.85ns 128M: 8.31ns 8.58ns 230.46ns 242.63ns -> 8.22ns 8.39ns 227.99ns 240.29ns 256M: 8.80ns 8.80ns 248.24ns 261.68ns -> 8.35ns 8.55ns 250.18ns 262.20ns Note I also chose to enforce PXNTable at the PMD layer only (for now), since the 194 descriptors which are affected by this change on my testing setup are not sufficient to warrant enforcement at a coarser granularity. The architecture-independent changes (I term "generic") can be classified only as refactoring, but I feel are also major improvements in that they standardize most uses of the vmalloc interface across the kernel. Note this patch reduces the arm64 allocated region for BPF and kprobes, but only to match with the existing allocation choices made by the generic kernel. I will admit I do not understand why BPF JIT allocation code was duplicated into arm64, but I also feel that this was either an artifact or that these overrides for generic allocation should require a specific KConfig as they trade off between security and space. That said, I have chosen not to wrap this patch in a KConfig interface, as I feel the changes provide significant benefit to the arm64 kernel's baseline security, though a KConfig could certainly be added if the maintainers see the need. Maxwell Bland (4): mm/vmalloc: allow arch-specific vmalloc_node overrides mm: pgalloc: support address-conditional pmd allocation arm64: separate code and data virtual memory allocation arm64: dynamic enforcement of pmd-level PXNTable arch/arm/kernel/irq.c | 2 +- arch/arm64/include/asm/pgalloc.h | 11 +++++- arch/arm64/include/asm/vmalloc.h | 8 ++++ arch/arm64/include/asm/vmap_stack.h | 2 +- arch/arm64/kernel/efi.c | 2 +- arch/arm64/kernel/module.c | 7 ++++ arch/arm64/kernel/probes/kprobes.c | 2 +- arch/arm64/mm/Makefile | 3 +- arch/arm64/mm/trans_pgd.c | 2 +- arch/arm64/mm/vmalloc.c | 57 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ arch/arm64/net/bpf_jit_comp.c | 5 ++- arch/powerpc/kernel/irq.c | 2 +- arch/riscv/include/asm/irq_stack.h | 2 +- arch/s390/hypfs/hypfs_diag.c | 2 +- arch/s390/kernel/setup.c | 6 +-- arch/s390/kernel/sthyi.c | 2 +- include/asm-generic/pgalloc.h | 18 +++++++++ include/linux/mm.h | 4 +- include/linux/vmalloc.h | 15 +++++++- kernel/bpf/syscall.c | 4 +- kernel/fork.c | 4 +- kernel/scs.c | 3 +- lib/objpool.c | 2 +- lib/test_vmalloc.c | 6 +-- mm/hugetlb_vmemmap.c | 4 +- mm/kasan/init.c | 22 ++++++----- mm/memory.c | 4 +- mm/percpu.c | 2 +- mm/pgalloc-track.h | 3 +- mm/sparse-vmemmap.c | 2 +- mm/util.c | 3 +- mm/vmalloc.c | 39 +++++++------------- 32 files changed, 176 insertions(+), 74 deletions(-) create mode 100644 arch/arm64/mm/vmalloc.c base-commit: b401b621758e46812da61fa58a67c3fd8d91de0d