On 2016-06-21 10:51, Ben Hutchings wrote: > On Tue, 2016-06-21 at 10:37 +0100, Pengfei Wang wrote: > > > > > > 在 2016年6月20日,下午8:18,Oleg Nesterov <[email protected]> 写道: > > > > > > Not that I understand this report, but > > > > > > On 06/20, Richard Guy Briggs wrote: > > > > > > > > This function is only ever called by __audit_free(), which is only ever > > > > called on failure of task creation or on exit of the task, so in neither > > > > case can anything else change it. > > > > > > How so? > > > > > > Another thread or CLONE_VM task or /proc/pid/mem can change the user-space > > > memory in parallel. > > > > > > Oleg. > > > > > > Exactly, by saying “change the data”, I mean the modification from > > malicious users with crafted operations on the user space memory > > directly, rather than the normal operations within the audit > > subsystem in Linux. Moreover, since the copy operations from the user > > space are not protected by any locks or synchronization primitives, > > changing the data under race condition is feasible I think. Besides, > > there isn’t any visible checking step in the code to guarantee the > > consistency between the two copy operations. > > > > Here I would like to figure out what the consequences really are once > > the data is changed between the two copy operations, such as changing > > a none-control string to a control string but process it as a none- > > control string that has no control chars. I think problems will > > happen. > > So far as userland can see, kernel log lines are separated by newlines.
Newlines are control characters that would be caught by that filter. That filter catches '"', < 0x21, > 0x7e. > If we fail to escape a newline, that makes it possible to inject > arbitrary log lines into the kernel log, which may be misleading to the > administrator or to software parsing the log. So, this is addressed, but I'm still trying to assess the danger of this repeated call to copy_from_user(). > Ben. - RGB -- Richard Guy Briggs <[email protected]> Kernel Security Engineering, Base Operating Systems, Red Hat Remote, Ottawa, Canada Voice: +1.647.777.2635, Internal: (81) 32635 -- Linux-audit mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-audit
