On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 09:42:42PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote:
> From: Mickaël Salaün <[email protected]>
> 
> A Landlock ruleset is mainly a red-black tree with Landlock rules as
> nodes.  This enables quick update and lookup to match a requested
> access, e.g. to a file.  A ruleset is usable through a dedicated file
> descriptor (cf. following commit implementing syscalls) which enables a
> process to create and populate a ruleset with new rules.
> 
> A domain is a ruleset tied to a set of processes.  This group of rules
> defines the security policy enforced on these processes and their future
> children.  A domain can transition to a new domain which is the
> intersection of all its constraints and those of a ruleset provided by
> the current process.  This modification only impact the current process.
> This means that a process can only gain more constraints (i.e. lose
> accesses) over time.
> 
> Cc: James Morris <[email protected]>
> Cc: Jann Horn <[email protected]>
> Cc: Kees Cook <[email protected]>
> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <[email protected]>
> Acked-by: Serge Hallyn <[email protected]>
> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected]

(Aside: you appear to be self-adding your Link: tags -- AIUI, this is
normally done by whoever pulls your series. I've only seen Link: tags
added when needing to refer to something else not included in the
series.)

> [...]
> +static void put_rule(struct landlock_rule *const rule)
> +{
> +     might_sleep();
> +     if (!rule)
> +             return;
> +     landlock_put_object(rule->object);
> +     kfree(rule);
> +}

I'd expect this to be named "release" rather than "put" since it doesn't
do any lifetime reference counting.

> +static void build_check_ruleset(void)
> +{
> +     const struct landlock_ruleset ruleset = {
> +             .num_rules = ~0,
> +             .num_layers = ~0,
> +     };
> +
> +     BUILD_BUG_ON(ruleset.num_rules < LANDLOCK_MAX_NUM_RULES);
> +     BUILD_BUG_ON(ruleset.num_layers < LANDLOCK_MAX_NUM_LAYERS);
> +}

This is checking that the largest possible stored value is correctly
within the LANDLOCK_MAX_* macro value?

> [...]

The locking all looks right, and given your test coverage and syzkaller
work, it's hard for me to think of ways to prove it out any better. :)

Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <[email protected]>


-- 
Kees Cook

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