[PATCH 2/3] namei: implement AT_THIS_ROOT chroot-like path resolution

Aleksa Sarai cyphar at cyphar.com
Fri Oct 5 15:07:28 UTC 2018


On 2018-10-04, Jann Horn <jannh at google.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 4, 2018 at 6:26 PM Aleksa Sarai <cyphar at cyphar.com> wrote:
> > On 2018-09-29, Jann Horn <jannh at google.com> wrote:
> > > You attempt to open "C/../../etc/passwd" under the root "/A/B".
> > > Something else concurrently moves /A/B/C to /A/C. This can result in
> > > the following:
> > >
> > > 1. You start the path walk and reach /A/B/C.
> > > 2. The other process moves /A/B/C to /A/C. Your path walk is now at /A/C.
> > > 3. Your path walk follows the first ".." up into /A. This is outside
> > > the process root, but you never actually encountered the process root,
> > > so you don't notice.
> > > 4. Your path walk follows the second ".." up to /. Again, this is
> > > outside the process root, but you don't notice.
> > > 5. Your path walk walks down to /etc/passwd, and the open completes
> > > successfully. You now have an fd pointing outside your chroot.
> >
> > I've been playing with this and I have the following patch, which
> > according to my testing protects against attacks where ".." skips over
> > nd->root. It abuses __d_path to figure out if nd->path can be resolved
> > from nd->root (obviously a proper version of this patch would refactor
> > __d_path so it could be used like this -- and would not return
> > -EMULTIHOP).
> >
> > I've also attached my reproducer. With it, I was seeing fairly constant
> > breakouts before this patch and after it I didn't see a single breakout
> > after running it overnight. Obviously this is not conclusive, but I'm
> > hoping that it can show what my idea for protecting against ".." was.
> >
> > Does this patch make sense? Or is there something wrong with it that I'm
> > not seeing?
> >
> > --8<-------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > There is a fairly easy-to-exploit race condition with chroot(2) (and
> > thus by extension AT_THIS_ROOT and AT_BENEATH) where a rename(2) of a
> > path can be used to "skip over" nd->root and thus escape to the
> > filesystem above nd->root.
> >
> >   thread1 [attacker]:
> >     for (;;)
> >       renameat2(AT_FDCWD, "/a/b/c", AT_FDCWD, "/a/d", RENAME_EXCHANGE);
> >   thread2 [victim]:
> >     for (;;)
> >       openat(dirb, "b/c/../../etc/shadow", O_THISROOT);
> >
> > With fairly significant regularity, thread2 will resolve to
> > "/etc/shadow" rather than "/a/b/etc/shadow". With this patch, such cases
> > will be detected during ".." resolution (which is the weak point of
> > chroot(2) -- since walking *into* a subdirectory tautologically cannot
> > result in you walking *outside* nd->root).
> >
> > The use of __d_path here might seem suspect, however we don't mind if a
> > path is moved from within the chroot to outside the chroot and we
> > incorrectly decide it is safe (because at that point we are still within
> > the set of files which were accessible at the beginning of resolution).
> > However, we can fail resolution on the next path component if it remains
> > outside of the root. A path which has always been outside nd->root
> > during resolution will never be resolveable from nd->root and thus will
> > always be blocked.
> >
> > DO NOT MERGE: Currently this code returns -EMULTIHOP in this case,
> >               purely as a debugging measure (so that you can see that
> >               the protection actually does something). Obviously in the
> >               proper patch this will return -EXDEV.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <cyphar at cyphar.com>
> > ---
> >  fs/namei.c | 32 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
> >  1 file changed, 30 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> >
> > diff --git a/fs/namei.c b/fs/namei.c
> > index 6f995e6de6b1..c8349693d47b 100644
> > --- a/fs/namei.c
> > +++ b/fs/namei.c
> > @@ -53,8 +53,8 @@
> >   * The new code replaces the old recursive symlink resolution with
> >   * an iterative one (in case of non-nested symlink chains).  It does
> >   * this with calls to <fs>_follow_link().
> > - * As a side effect, dir_namei(), _namei() and follow_link() are now
> > - * replaced with a single function lookup_dentry() that can handle all
> > + * As a side effect, dir_namei(), _namei() and follow_link() are now
> > + * replaced with a single function lookup_dentry() that can handle all
> >   * the special cases of the former code.
> >   *
> >   * With the new dcache, the pathname is stored at each inode, at least as
> > @@ -1375,6 +1375,20 @@ static int follow_dotdot_rcu(struct nameidata *nd)
> >                                 return -EXDEV;
> >                         break;
> >                 }
> > +               if (unlikely(nd->flags & (LOOKUP_BENEATH | LOOKUP_CHROOT))) {
> > +                       char *pathbuf, *pathptr;
> > +
> > +                       pathbuf = kmalloc(PATH_MAX, GFP_ATOMIC);
> > +                       if (!pathbuf)
> > +                               return -ECHILD;
> > +                       pathptr = __d_path(&nd->path, &nd->root, pathbuf, PATH_MAX);
> > +                       kfree(pathbuf);
> > +                       if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(pathptr)) {
> > +                               if (!pathptr)
> > +                                       pathptr = ERR_PTR(-EMULTIHOP);
> > +                               return PTR_ERR(pathptr);
> > +                       }
> > +               }
> 
> One somewhat problematic thing about this approach is that if someone
> tries to lookup
> "a/a/a/a/a/a/a/a/a/a/[...]/../../../../../../../../../.." for some
> reason, you'll have quadratic runtime: For each "..", you'll have to
> walk up to the root.

What if we took rename_lock (call it nd->r_seq) at the start of the
resolution, and then only tried the __d_path-style check

  if (read_seqretry(&rename_lock, nd->r_seq) ||
      read_seqretry(&mount_lock, nd->m_seq))
	  /* do the __d_path lookup. */

That way you would only hit the slow path if there were concurrent
renames or mounts *and* you are doing a path resolution with
AT_THIS_ROOT or AT_BENEATH. I've attached a modified patch that does
this (and after some testing it also appears to work).

I'm not sure if there's a way to always avoid the quadratic lookup
without (significantly and probably unreasonably) changing how dcache
invalidation works. And obviously using this slow path if there was
_any_ rename on the _entire_ system is suboptimal, but I think it is a
significant improvement.

Another possibility is to expand on Andy's suggestion to use
/proc/$pid/root, and instead require AT_THIS_ROOT to use the root of a
namespace as its dirfd (I'm not sure if there's a trivial way to detect
this though). This wouldn't help with AT_BENEATH, but it should protect
against ".." shenanigans without any ".." handling changes. (This is
less ideal because it requires a container process, but it is another
way of dealing with the issue.)

---
 fs/namei.c | 49 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
 1 file changed, 46 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/fs/namei.c b/fs/namei.c
index 6f995e6de6b1..12c9be175cb4 100644
--- a/fs/namei.c
+++ b/fs/namei.c
@@ -493,7 +493,7 @@ struct nameidata {
 	struct path	root;
 	struct inode	*inode; /* path.dentry.d_inode */
 	unsigned int	flags;
-	unsigned	seq, m_seq;
+	unsigned	seq, m_seq, r_seq;
 	int		last_type;
 	unsigned	depth;
 	int		total_link_count;
@@ -1375,6 +1375,27 @@ static int follow_dotdot_rcu(struct nameidata *nd)
 				return -EXDEV;
 			break;
 		}
+		if (unlikely((nd->flags & (LOOKUP_BENEATH | LOOKUP_CHROOT)) &&
+			     (read_seqretry(&rename_lock, nd->r_seq) ||
+			      read_seqretry(&mount_lock, nd->m_seq)))) {
+			char *pathbuf, *pathptr;
+
+			nd->r_seq = read_seqbegin(&rename_lock);
+			/* Cannot take m_seq here. */
+
+			pathbuf = kmalloc(PATH_MAX, GFP_ATOMIC);
+			if (!pathbuf)
+				return -ECHILD;
+			pathptr = __d_path(&nd->path, &nd->root, pathbuf, PATH_MAX);
+			kfree(pathbuf);
+			if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(pathptr)) {
+				int error = PTR_ERR_OR_ZERO(pathptr);
+
+				if (!error)
+					error = nd_jump_root(nd);
+				return error;
+			}
+		}
 		if (nd->path.dentry != nd->path.mnt->mnt_root) {
 			struct dentry *old = nd->path.dentry;
 			struct dentry *parent = old->d_parent;
@@ -1510,6 +1531,27 @@ static int follow_dotdot(struct nameidata *nd)
 				return -EXDEV;
 			break;
 		}
+		if (unlikely((nd->flags & (LOOKUP_BENEATH | LOOKUP_CHROOT)) &&
+			     (read_seqretry(&rename_lock, nd->r_seq) ||
+			      read_seqretry(&mount_lock, nd->m_seq)))) {
+			char *pathbuf, *pathptr;
+
+			nd->r_seq = read_seqbegin(&rename_lock);
+			/* Cannot take m_seq here. */
+
+			pathbuf = kmalloc(PATH_MAX, GFP_KERNEL);
+			if (!pathbuf)
+				return -ENOMEM;
+			pathptr = __d_path(&nd->path, &nd->root, pathbuf, PATH_MAX);
+			kfree(pathbuf);
+			if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(pathptr)) {
+				int error = PTR_ERR_OR_ZERO(pathptr);
+
+				if (!error)
+					error = nd_jump_root(nd);
+				return error;
+			}
+		}
 		if (nd->path.dentry != nd->path.mnt->mnt_root) {
 			int ret = path_parent_directory(&nd->path);
 			if (ret)
@@ -2269,6 +2311,9 @@ static const char *path_init(struct nameidata *nd, unsigned flags)
 	nd->last_type = LAST_ROOT; /* if there are only slashes... */
 	nd->flags = flags | LOOKUP_JUMPED | LOOKUP_PARENT;
 	nd->depth = 0;
+	nd->m_seq = read_seqbegin(&mount_lock);
+	nd->r_seq = read_seqbegin(&rename_lock);
+
 	if (flags & LOOKUP_ROOT) {
 		struct dentry *root = nd->root.dentry;
 		struct inode *inode = root->d_inode;
@@ -2279,7 +2324,6 @@ static const char *path_init(struct nameidata *nd, unsigned flags)
 		if (flags & LOOKUP_RCU) {
 			nd->seq = __read_seqcount_begin(&nd->path.dentry->d_seq);
 			nd->root_seq = nd->seq;
-			nd->m_seq = read_seqbegin(&mount_lock);
 		} else {
 			path_get(&nd->path);
 		}
@@ -2290,7 +2334,6 @@ static const char *path_init(struct nameidata *nd, unsigned flags)
 	nd->path.mnt = NULL;
 	nd->path.dentry = NULL;
 
-	nd->m_seq = read_seqbegin(&mount_lock);
 	if (unlikely(flags & (LOOKUP_CHROOT | LOOKUP_XDEV))) {
 		error = dirfd_path_init(nd);
 		if (unlikely(error))
-- 
2.19.0


-- 
Aleksa Sarai
Senior Software Engineer (Containers)
SUSE Linux GmbH
<https://www.cyphar.com/>
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