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Our logs are full of:
Sep 19 09:22:10 autopkgtest systemd[690]: Failed to add rule for system call oldstat() / -10037, ignoring: Numerical argument out of domain
Sep 19 09:22:10 autopkgtest systemd[690]: Failed to add rule for system call get_thread_area() / -10076, ignoring: Numerical argument out of domain
Sep 19 09:22:10 autopkgtest systemd[690]: Failed to add rule for system call set_thread_area() / -10079, ignoring: Numerical argument out of domain
Sep 19 09:22:10 autopkgtest systemd[690]: Failed to add rule for system call oldfstat() / -10034, ignoring: Numerical argument out of domain
Sep 19 09:22:10 autopkgtest systemd[690]: Failed to add rule for system call oldolduname() / -10036, ignoring: Numerical argument out of domain
Sep 19 09:22:10 autopkgtest systemd[690]: Failed to add rule for system call oldlstat() / -10035, ignoring: Numerical argument out of domain
Sep 19 09:22:10 autopkgtest systemd[690]: Failed to add rule for system call waitpid() / -10073, ignoring: Numerical argument out of domain
...
This is pointless and makes debug logs hard to read. Let's keep the logs
in test code, but disable it in nspawn and pid1. This is done through a function
parameter because those functions operate recursively and it's not possible to
make the caller to log meaningfully.
There should be no functional change, except the skipped debug logs.
Currently we employ mostly system call blacklisting for our system
services. Let's add a new system call filter group @system-service that
helps turning this around into a whitelist by default.
The new group is very similar to nspawn's default filter list, but in
some ways more restricted (as sethostname() and suchlike shouldn't be
available to most system services just like that) and in others more
relaxed (for example @keyring is blocked in nspawn since it's not
properly virtualized yet in the kernel, but is fine for regular system
services).
These lines are generally out-of-date, incomplete and unnecessary. With
SPDX and git repository much more accurate and fine grained information
about licensing and authorship is available, hence let's drop the
per-file copyright notice. Of course, removing copyright lines of others
is problematic, hence this commit only removes my own lines and leaves
all others untouched. It might be nicer if sooner or later those could
go away too, making git the only and accurate source of authorship
information.
This part of the copyright blurb stems from the GPL use recommendations:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
The concept appears to originate in times where version control was per
file, instead of per tree, and was a way to glue the files together.
Ultimately, we nowadays don't live in that world anymore, and this
information is entirely useless anyway, as people are very welcome to
copy these files into any projects they like, and they shouldn't have to
change bits that are part of our copyright header for that.
hence, let's just get rid of this old cruft, and shorten our codebase a
bit.
Files which are installed as-is (any .service and other unit files, .conf
files, .policy files, etc), are left as is. My assumption is that SPDX
identifiers are not yet that well known, so it's better to retain the
extended header to avoid any doubt.
I also kept any copyright lines. We can probably remove them, but it'd nice to
obtain explicit acks from all involved authors before doing that.
This renames wait_for_terminate_and_warn() to
wait_for_terminate_and_check(), and adds a flags parameter, that
controls how much to log: there's one flag that means we log about
abnormal stuff, and another one that controls whether we log about
non-zero exit codes. Finally, there's a shortcut flag value for logging
in both cases, as that's what we usually use.
All callers are accordingly updated. At three occasions duplicate logging
is removed, i.e. where the old function was called but logged in the
caller, too.
glibc appears to propagate different errors in different ways, let's fix
this up, so that our own code doesn't get confused by this.
See #6752 + #6737 for details.
Fixes: #6755
Let's lock the personality to the currently set one, if nothing is
specifically specified. But do so with a grain of salt, and never
default to any exotic personality here, but only PER_LINUX or
PER_LINUX32.
Add LockPersonality boolean to allow locking down personality(2)
system call so that the execution domain can't be changed.
This may be useful to improve security because odd emulations
may be poorly tested and source of vulnerabilities, while
system services shouldn't need any weird personalities.
We expect that if socket() syscall is available, seccomp works for that
architecture. So instead of explicitly listing all architectures where we know
it is not available, just assume it is broken if the number is not defined.
This should have the same effect, except that other architectures where it is
also broken will pass tests without further changes. (Architectures where the
filter should work, but does not work because of missing entries in
seccomp-util.c, will still fail.)
i386, s390, s390x are the exception — setting the filter fails, even though
socket() is available, so it needs to be special-cased
(https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/5215#issuecomment-277241488).
This remove the last define in seccomp-util.h that was only used in test-seccomp.c. Porting
the seccomp filter to new architectures should be simpler because now only two places need
to be modified.
RestrictAddressFamilies seems to work on ppc64[bl]e, so enable it (the tests pass).
While adding the defines for arm, I realized that we have pretty much all
known architectures covered, so SECCOMP_RESTRICT_NAMESPACES_BROKEN is not
necessary anymore. clone(2) is adamant that the order of the first two
arguments is only reversed on s390/s390x. So let's simplify things and remove
the #if.
SECCOMP_MEMORY_DENY_WRITE_EXECUTE_BROKEN was conflating two separate things:
1. whether shmat/shmdt/shmget can be filtered (if ipc multiplexer is used, they can not)
2. whether we know this for the current architecture
For i386, shmat is implemented as ipc, so seccomp filter is "broken" for shmat,
but not for mmap, and SECCOMP_MEMORY_DENY_WRITE_EXECUTE_BROKEN cannot be used
to cover both cases. The define was only used for tests — not in the implementation
in seccomp-util.c. So let's get rid of SECCOMP_MEMORY_DENY_WRITE_EXECUTE_BROKEN
and encode the right condition directly in tests.
Add a bit of code that tries to get the right parameter order in place
for some of the better known architectures, and skips
restrict_namespaces for other archs.
This also bypasses the test on archs where we don't know the right
order.
In this case I didn't bother with testing the case where no filter is
applied, since that is hopefully just an issue for now, as there's
nothing stopping us from supporting more archs, we just need to know
which order is right.
Fixes: #5241
On i386 we block the old mmap() call entirely, since we cannot properly
filter it. Thankfully it hasn't been used by glibc since quite some
time.
Fixes: #5240
This substantially reworks the seccomp code, to ensure better
compatibility with some architectures, including i386.
So far we relied on libseccomp's internal handling of the multiple
syscall ABIs supported on Linux. This is problematic however, as it does
not define clear semantics if an ABI is not able to support specific
seccomp rules we install.
This rework hence changes a couple of things:
- We no longer use seccomp_rule_add(), but only
seccomp_rule_add_exact(), and fail the installation of a filter if the
architecture doesn't support it.
- We no longer rely on adding multiple syscall architectures to a single filter,
but instead install a separate filter for each syscall architecture
supported. This way, we can install a strict filter for x86-64, while
permitting a less strict filter for i386.
- All high-level filter additions are now moved from execute.c to
seccomp-util.c, so that we can test them independently of the service
execution logic.
- Tests have been added for all types of our seccomp filters.
- SystemCallFilters= and SystemCallArchitectures= are now implemented in
independent filters and installation logic, as they semantically are
very much independent of each other.
Fixes: #4575
This new setting permits restricting whether namespaces may be created and
managed by processes started by a unit. It installs a seccomp filter blocking
certain invocations of unshare(), clone() and setns().
RestrictNamespaces=no is the default, and does not restrict namespaces in any
way. RestrictNamespaces=yes takes away the ability to create or manage any kind
of namspace. "RestrictNamespaces=mnt ipc" restricts the creation of namespaces
so that only mount and IPC namespaces may be created/managed, but no other
kind of namespaces.
This setting should be improve security quite a bit as in particular user
namespacing was a major source of CVEs in the kernel in the past, and is
accessible to unprivileged processes. With this setting the entire attack
surface may be removed for system services that do not make use of namespaces.