This bug was fixed in the package libseccomp - 2.3.1-2.1ubuntu2

---------------
libseccomp (2.3.1-2.1ubuntu2) artful; urgency=medium

  * add-log-action.patch: Minimal backport to support the SECCOMP_RET_LOG
    action that will be released in Linux kernel version 4.14. (LP: #1567597)

 -- Tyler Hicks <tyhi...@canonical.com>  Tue, 19 Sep 2017 21:37:38 +0000

** Changed in: libseccomp (Ubuntu)
       Status: Fix Committed => Fix Released

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1567597

Title:
  [FFe] implement 'complain mode' in seccomp for developer mode with
  snaps

Status in Snappy:
  Confirmed
Status in libseccomp package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released
Status in linux package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released

Bug description:
  A requirement for snappy is that a snap may be placed in developer
  mode which will put the security sandbox in complain mode such that
  violations against policy are logged, but permitted. In this manner
  learning tools can be written to parse the logs, etc and make
  developing on snappy easier.

  Unfortunately with seccomp only SCMP_ACT_KILL logs to dmesg and while
  we can set complain mode to permit all calls, they are not logged at
  this time. I've discussed this with upstream and we are working
  together on the approach. This may require a kernel patch and an
  update to libseccomp, to filing this bug for now as a placeholder and
  we'll add other tasks as necessary.

  UPDATE: ubuntu-core-launcher now supports the '@complain' directive
  that is a synonym for '@unrestricted' so people can at least turn on
  developer mode and not be blocked by seccomp. Proper complain mode for
  seccomp needs to still be implemented (this bug).

  [Impact]

  Snapd needs a way to log seccomp actions without blocking any syscalls
  in order to have a more useful complain mode. Such functionality has
  been acked upstream and patches are on their way into the Linux 4.14
  kernel (backported to 4.12.0-13.14 in artful).

  The corresponding libseccomp changes are still undergoing review
  (https://github.com/seccomp/libseccomp/pull/92). The pull request adds
  a number of new symbols and probably isn't appropriate to backport
  until upstream has acked the pull request. However, only a small part
  of that larger pull request is needed by snapd and that change can be
  safely backported since the only added symbol, the SCMP_ACT_LOG macro,
  must match the SECCOMP_RET_LOG macro that has already been approved
  and merged in the upstream Linux kernel.

  [Test Case]

  A large number of tests are ran as part of the libseccomp build.
  However, the "live" tests which test libseccomp with actual kernel
  enforcement are not ran at that time. They can be manually exercised
  to help catch any regressions. Note that on Artful, there's an
  existing test failure (20-live-basic_die%%002-00001):

  $ sudo apt build-dep -y libseccomp
  $ sudo apt install -y cython
  $ apt source libseccomp
  $ autoreconf -ivf && ./configure --enable-python && make check-build
  $ (cd tests && ./regression -T live)
  ...
  Test 20-live-basic_die%%002-00001 result:   FAILURE 20-live-basic_die TRAP 
rc=159
  ...
  Regression Test Summary
   tests run: 12
   tests skipped: 0
   tests passed: 11
   tests failed: 1
   tests errored: 0
  ============================================================

  Now we can build and run a small test program to test the SCMP_ACT_LOG
  action in the way that snapd wants to use it for developer mode:

  $ sudo apt install -y libseccomp-dev
  $ gcc -o lp1567597-test lp1567597-test.c -lseccomp
  $ ./lp1567597-test

  The exit code should be 0 and you should have an entry in the system
  log that looks like this:

  audit: type=1326 audit(1505859630.994:69): auid=1000 uid=1000 gid=1000
  ses=2 pid=18451 comm="lp1567597-test"
  exe="/home/tyhicks/lp1567597-test" sig=0 arch=c000003e syscall=2
  compat=0 ip=0x7f547352c5c0 code=0x7ffc0000

  [Regression Potential]

  Relatively small since the core logic is in the kernel and we're only
  exposing the new action through libseccomp. The changes include smarts
  to query the kernel to see if the action is available in the kernel.
  Calling applications will not be able to use the action on older
  kernels that don't support it.

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