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- ====================
- Credentials in Linux
- ====================
- By: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
- .. contents:: :local:
- Overview
- ========
- There are several parts to the security check performed by Linux when one
- object acts upon another:
- 1. Objects.
- Objects are things in the system that may be acted upon directly by
- userspace programs. Linux has a variety of actionable objects, including:
- - Tasks
- - Files/inodes
- - Sockets
- - Message queues
- - Shared memory segments
- - Semaphores
- - Keys
- As a part of the description of all these objects there is a set of
- credentials. What's in the set depends on the type of object.
- 2. Object ownership.
- Amongst the credentials of most objects, there will be a subset that
- indicates the ownership of that object. This is used for resource
- accounting and limitation (disk quotas and task rlimits for example).
- In a standard UNIX filesystem, for instance, this will be defined by the
- UID marked on the inode.
- 3. The objective context.
- Also amongst the credentials of those objects, there will be a subset that
- indicates the 'objective context' of that object. This may or may not be
- the same set as in (2) - in standard UNIX files, for instance, this is the
- defined by the UID and the GID marked on the inode.
- The objective context is used as part of the security calculation that is
- carried out when an object is acted upon.
- 4. Subjects.
- A subject is an object that is acting upon another object.
- Most of the objects in the system are inactive: they don't act on other
- objects within the system. Processes/tasks are the obvious exception:
- they do stuff; they access and manipulate things.
- Objects other than tasks may under some circumstances also be subjects.
- For instance an open file may send SIGIO to a task using the UID and EUID
- given to it by a task that called ``fcntl(F_SETOWN)`` upon it. In this case,
- the file struct will have a subjective context too.
- 5. The subjective context.
- A subject has an additional interpretation of its credentials. A subset
- of its credentials forms the 'subjective context'. The subjective context
- is used as part of the security calculation that is carried out when a
- subject acts.
- A Linux task, for example, has the FSUID, FSGID and the supplementary
- group list for when it is acting upon a file - which are quite separate
- from the real UID and GID that normally form the objective context of the
- task.
- 6. Actions.
- Linux has a number of actions available that a subject may perform upon an
- object. The set of actions available depends on the nature of the subject
- and the object.
- Actions include reading, writing, creating and deleting files; forking or
- signalling and tracing tasks.
- 7. Rules, access control lists and security calculations.
- When a subject acts upon an object, a security calculation is made. This
- involves taking the subjective context, the objective context and the
- action, and searching one or more sets of rules to see whether the subject
- is granted or denied permission to act in the desired manner on the
- object, given those contexts.
- There are two main sources of rules:
- a. Discretionary access control (DAC):
- Sometimes the object will include sets of rules as part of its
- description. This is an 'Access Control List' or 'ACL'. A Linux
- file may supply more than one ACL.
- A traditional UNIX file, for example, includes a permissions mask that
- is an abbreviated ACL with three fixed classes of subject ('user',
- 'group' and 'other'), each of which may be granted certain privileges
- ('read', 'write' and 'execute' - whatever those map to for the object
- in question). UNIX file permissions do not allow the arbitrary
- specification of subjects, however, and so are of limited use.
- A Linux file might also sport a POSIX ACL. This is a list of rules
- that grants various permissions to arbitrary subjects.
- b. Mandatory access control (MAC):
- The system as a whole may have one or more sets of rules that get
- applied to all subjects and objects, regardless of their source.
- SELinux and Smack are examples of this.
- In the case of SELinux and Smack, each object is given a label as part
- of its credentials. When an action is requested, they take the
- subject label, the object label and the action and look for a rule
- that says that this action is either granted or denied.
- Types of Credentials
- ====================
- The Linux kernel supports the following types of credentials:
- 1. Traditional UNIX credentials.
- - Real User ID
- - Real Group ID
- The UID and GID are carried by most, if not all, Linux objects, even if in
- some cases it has to be invented (FAT or CIFS files for example, which are
- derived from Windows). These (mostly) define the objective context of
- that object, with tasks being slightly different in some cases.
- - Effective, Saved and FS User ID
- - Effective, Saved and FS Group ID
- - Supplementary groups
- These are additional credentials used by tasks only. Usually, an
- EUID/EGID/GROUPS will be used as the subjective context, and real UID/GID
- will be used as the objective. For tasks, it should be noted that this is
- not always true.
- 2. Capabilities.
- - Set of permitted capabilities
- - Set of inheritable capabilities
- - Set of effective capabilities
- - Capability bounding set
- These are only carried by tasks. They indicate superior capabilities
- granted piecemeal to a task that an ordinary task wouldn't otherwise have.
- These are manipulated implicitly by changes to the traditional UNIX
- credentials, but can also be manipulated directly by the ``capset()``
- system call.
- The permitted capabilities are those caps that the process might grant
- itself to its effective or permitted sets through ``capset()``. This
- inheritable set might also be so constrained.
- The effective capabilities are the ones that a task is actually allowed to
- make use of itself.
- The inheritable capabilities are the ones that may get passed across
- ``execve()``.
- The bounding set limits the capabilities that may be inherited across
- ``execve()``, especially when a binary is executed that will execute as
- UID 0.
- 3. Secure management flags (securebits).
- These are only carried by tasks. These govern the way the above
- credentials are manipulated and inherited over certain operations such as
- execve(). They aren't used directly as objective or subjective
- credentials.
- 4. Keys and keyrings.
- These are only carried by tasks. They carry and cache security tokens
- that don't fit into the other standard UNIX credentials. They are for
- making such things as network filesystem keys available to the file
- accesses performed by processes, without the necessity of ordinary
- programs having to know about security details involved.
- Keyrings are a special type of key. They carry sets of other keys and can
- be searched for the desired key. Each process may subscribe to a number
- of keyrings:
- Per-thread keying
- Per-process keyring
- Per-session keyring
- When a process accesses a key, if not already present, it will normally be
- cached on one of these keyrings for future accesses to find.
- For more information on using keys, see Documentation/security/keys.txt.
- 5. LSM
- The Linux Security Module allows extra controls to be placed over the
- operations that a task may do. Currently Linux supports several LSM
- options.
- Some work by labelling the objects in a system and then applying sets of
- rules (policies) that say what operations a task with one label may do to
- an object with another label.
- 6. AF_KEY
- This is a socket-based approach to credential management for networking
- stacks [RFC 2367]. It isn't discussed by this document as it doesn't
- interact directly with task and file credentials; rather it keeps system
- level credentials.
- When a file is opened, part of the opening task's subjective context is
- recorded in the file struct created. This allows operations using that file
- struct to use those credentials instead of the subjective context of the task
- that issued the operation. An example of this would be a file opened on a
- network filesystem where the credentials of the opened file should be presented
- to the server, regardless of who is actually doing a read or a write upon it.
- File Markings
- =============
- Files on disk or obtained over the network may have annotations that form the
- objective security context of that file. Depending on the type of filesystem,
- this may include one or more of the following:
- * UNIX UID, GID, mode;
- * Windows user ID;
- * Access control list;
- * LSM security label;
- * UNIX exec privilege escalation bits (SUID/SGID);
- * File capabilities exec privilege escalation bits.
- These are compared to the task's subjective security context, and certain
- operations allowed or disallowed as a result. In the case of execve(), the
- privilege escalation bits come into play, and may allow the resulting process
- extra privileges, based on the annotations on the executable file.
- Task Credentials
- ================
- In Linux, all of a task's credentials are held in (uid, gid) or through
- (groups, keys, LSM security) a refcounted structure of type 'struct cred'.
- Each task points to its credentials by a pointer called 'cred' in its
- task_struct.
- Once a set of credentials has been prepared and committed, it may not be
- changed, barring the following exceptions:
- 1. its reference count may be changed;
- 2. the reference count on the group_info struct it points to may be changed;
- 3. the reference count on the security data it points to may be changed;
- 4. the reference count on any keyrings it points to may be changed;
- 5. any keyrings it points to may be revoked, expired or have their security
- attributes changed; and
- 6. the contents of any keyrings to which it points may be changed (the whole
- point of keyrings being a shared set of credentials, modifiable by anyone
- with appropriate access).
- To alter anything in the cred struct, the copy-and-replace principle must be
- adhered to. First take a copy, then alter the copy and then use RCU to change
- the task pointer to make it point to the new copy. There are wrappers to aid
- with this (see below).
- A task may only alter its _own_ credentials; it is no longer permitted for a
- task to alter another's credentials. This means the ``capset()`` system call
- is no longer permitted to take any PID other than the one of the current
- process. Also ``keyctl_instantiate()`` and ``keyctl_negate()`` functions no
- longer permit attachment to process-specific keyrings in the requesting
- process as the instantiating process may need to create them.
- Immutable Credentials
- ---------------------
- Once a set of credentials has been made public (by calling ``commit_creds()``
- for example), it must be considered immutable, barring two exceptions:
- 1. The reference count may be altered.
- 2. Whilst the keyring subscriptions of a set of credentials may not be
- changed, the keyrings subscribed to may have their contents altered.
- To catch accidental credential alteration at compile time, struct task_struct
- has _const_ pointers to its credential sets, as does struct file. Furthermore,
- certain functions such as ``get_cred()`` and ``put_cred()`` operate on const
- pointers, thus rendering casts unnecessary, but require to temporarily ditch
- the const qualification to be able to alter the reference count.
- Accessing Task Credentials
- --------------------------
- A task being able to alter only its own credentials permits the current process
- to read or replace its own credentials without the need for any form of locking
- -- which simplifies things greatly. It can just call::
- const struct cred *current_cred()
- to get a pointer to its credentials structure, and it doesn't have to release
- it afterwards.
- There are convenience wrappers for retrieving specific aspects of a task's
- credentials (the value is simply returned in each case)::
- uid_t current_uid(void) Current's real UID
- gid_t current_gid(void) Current's real GID
- uid_t current_euid(void) Current's effective UID
- gid_t current_egid(void) Current's effective GID
- uid_t current_fsuid(void) Current's file access UID
- gid_t current_fsgid(void) Current's file access GID
- kernel_cap_t current_cap(void) Current's effective capabilities
- void *current_security(void) Current's LSM security pointer
- struct user_struct *current_user(void) Current's user account
- There are also convenience wrappers for retrieving specific associated pairs of
- a task's credentials::
- void current_uid_gid(uid_t *, gid_t *);
- void current_euid_egid(uid_t *, gid_t *);
- void current_fsuid_fsgid(uid_t *, gid_t *);
- which return these pairs of values through their arguments after retrieving
- them from the current task's credentials.
- In addition, there is a function for obtaining a reference on the current
- process's current set of credentials::
- const struct cred *get_current_cred(void);
- and functions for getting references to one of the credentials that don't
- actually live in struct cred::
- struct user_struct *get_current_user(void);
- struct group_info *get_current_groups(void);
- which get references to the current process's user accounting structure and
- supplementary groups list respectively.
- Once a reference has been obtained, it must be released with ``put_cred()``,
- ``free_uid()`` or ``put_group_info()`` as appropriate.
- Accessing Another Task's Credentials
- ------------------------------------
- Whilst a task may access its own credentials without the need for locking, the
- same is not true of a task wanting to access another task's credentials. It
- must use the RCU read lock and ``rcu_dereference()``.
- The ``rcu_dereference()`` is wrapped by::
- const struct cred *__task_cred(struct task_struct *task);
- This should be used inside the RCU read lock, as in the following example::
- void foo(struct task_struct *t, struct foo_data *f)
- {
- const struct cred *tcred;
- ...
- rcu_read_lock();
- tcred = __task_cred(t);
- f->uid = tcred->uid;
- f->gid = tcred->gid;
- f->groups = get_group_info(tcred->groups);
- rcu_read_unlock();
- ...
- }
- Should it be necessary to hold another task's credentials for a long period of
- time, and possibly to sleep whilst doing so, then the caller should get a
- reference on them using::
- const struct cred *get_task_cred(struct task_struct *task);
- This does all the RCU magic inside of it. The caller must call put_cred() on
- the credentials so obtained when they're finished with.
- .. note::
- The result of ``__task_cred()`` should not be passed directly to
- ``get_cred()`` as this may race with ``commit_cred()``.
- There are a couple of convenience functions to access bits of another task's
- credentials, hiding the RCU magic from the caller::
- uid_t task_uid(task) Task's real UID
- uid_t task_euid(task) Task's effective UID
- If the caller is holding the RCU read lock at the time anyway, then::
- __task_cred(task)->uid
- __task_cred(task)->euid
- should be used instead. Similarly, if multiple aspects of a task's credentials
- need to be accessed, RCU read lock should be used, ``__task_cred()`` called,
- the result stored in a temporary pointer and then the credential aspects called
- from that before dropping the lock. This prevents the potentially expensive
- RCU magic from being invoked multiple times.
- Should some other single aspect of another task's credentials need to be
- accessed, then this can be used::
- task_cred_xxx(task, member)
- where 'member' is a non-pointer member of the cred struct. For instance::
- uid_t task_cred_xxx(task, suid);
- will retrieve 'struct cred::suid' from the task, doing the appropriate RCU
- magic. This may not be used for pointer members as what they point to may
- disappear the moment the RCU read lock is dropped.
- Altering Credentials
- --------------------
- As previously mentioned, a task may only alter its own credentials, and may not
- alter those of another task. This means that it doesn't need to use any
- locking to alter its own credentials.
- To alter the current process's credentials, a function should first prepare a
- new set of credentials by calling::
- struct cred *prepare_creds(void);
- this locks current->cred_replace_mutex and then allocates and constructs a
- duplicate of the current process's credentials, returning with the mutex still
- held if successful. It returns NULL if not successful (out of memory).
- The mutex prevents ``ptrace()`` from altering the ptrace state of a process
- whilst security checks on credentials construction and changing is taking place
- as the ptrace state may alter the outcome, particularly in the case of
- ``execve()``.
- The new credentials set should be altered appropriately, and any security
- checks and hooks done. Both the current and the proposed sets of credentials
- are available for this purpose as current_cred() will return the current set
- still at this point.
- When the credential set is ready, it should be committed to the current process
- by calling::
- int commit_creds(struct cred *new);
- This will alter various aspects of the credentials and the process, giving the
- LSM a chance to do likewise, then it will use ``rcu_assign_pointer()`` to
- actually commit the new credentials to ``current->cred``, it will release
- ``current->cred_replace_mutex`` to allow ``ptrace()`` to take place, and it
- will notify the scheduler and others of the changes.
- This function is guaranteed to return 0, so that it can be tail-called at the
- end of such functions as ``sys_setresuid()``.
- Note that this function consumes the caller's reference to the new credentials.
- The caller should _not_ call ``put_cred()`` on the new credentials afterwards.
- Furthermore, once this function has been called on a new set of credentials,
- those credentials may _not_ be changed further.
- Should the security checks fail or some other error occur after
- ``prepare_creds()`` has been called, then the following function should be
- invoked::
- void abort_creds(struct cred *new);
- This releases the lock on ``current->cred_replace_mutex`` that
- ``prepare_creds()`` got and then releases the new credentials.
- A typical credentials alteration function would look something like this::
- int alter_suid(uid_t suid)
- {
- struct cred *new;
- int ret;
- new = prepare_creds();
- if (!new)
- return -ENOMEM;
- new->suid = suid;
- ret = security_alter_suid(new);
- if (ret < 0) {
- abort_creds(new);
- return ret;
- }
- return commit_creds(new);
- }
- Managing Credentials
- --------------------
- There are some functions to help manage credentials:
- - ``void put_cred(const struct cred *cred);``
- This releases a reference to the given set of credentials. If the
- reference count reaches zero, the credentials will be scheduled for
- destruction by the RCU system.
- - ``const struct cred *get_cred(const struct cred *cred);``
- This gets a reference on a live set of credentials, returning a pointer to
- that set of credentials.
- - ``struct cred *get_new_cred(struct cred *cred);``
- This gets a reference on a set of credentials that is under construction
- and is thus still mutable, returning a pointer to that set of credentials.
- Open File Credentials
- =====================
- When a new file is opened, a reference is obtained on the opening task's
- credentials and this is attached to the file struct as ``f_cred`` in place of
- ``f_uid`` and ``f_gid``. Code that used to access ``file->f_uid`` and
- ``file->f_gid`` should now access ``file->f_cred->fsuid`` and
- ``file->f_cred->fsgid``.
- It is safe to access ``f_cred`` without the use of RCU or locking because the
- pointer will not change over the lifetime of the file struct, and nor will the
- contents of the cred struct pointed to, barring the exceptions listed above
- (see the Task Credentials section).
- Overriding the VFS's Use of Credentials
- =======================================
- Under some circumstances it is desirable to override the credentials used by
- the VFS, and that can be done by calling into such as ``vfs_mkdir()`` with a
- different set of credentials. This is done in the following places:
- * ``sys_faccessat()``.
- * ``do_coredump()``.
- * nfs4recover.c.
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