On Wed, Feb 21, 2024 at 11:40:27AM -0800, Suren Baghdasaryan wrote:
> [...]
> +struct alloc_tag {
> +     struct codetag                  ct;
> +     struct alloc_tag_counters __percpu      *counters;
> +} __aligned(8);
> [...]
> +#define DEFINE_ALLOC_TAG(_alloc_tag)                                         
> \
> +     static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct alloc_tag_counters, _alloc_tag_cntr);      
> \
> +     static struct alloc_tag _alloc_tag __used __aligned(8)                  
> \
> +     __section("alloc_tags") = {                                             
> \
> +             .ct = CODE_TAG_INIT,                                            
> \
> +             .counters = &_alloc_tag_cntr };
> [...]
> +static inline struct alloc_tag *alloc_tag_save(struct alloc_tag *tag)
> +{
> +     swap(current->alloc_tag, tag);
> +     return tag;
> +}

Future security hardening improvement idea based on this infrastructure:
it should be possible to implement per-allocation-site kmem caches. For
example, we could create:

struct alloc_details {
        u32 flags;
        union {
                u32 size; /* not valid after __init completes */
                struct kmem_cache *cache;
        };
};

- add struct alloc_details to struct alloc_tag
- move the tags section into .ro_after_init
- extend alloc_hooks() to populate flags and size:
        .flags = __builtin_constant_p(size) ? KMALLOC_ALLOCATE_FIXED
                                            : KMALLOC_ALLOCATE_BUCKETS;
        .size = __builtin_constant_p(size) ? size : SIZE_MAX;
- during kernel start or module init, walk the alloc_tag list
  and create either a fixed-size kmem_cache or to allocate a
  full set of kmalloc-buckets, and update the "cache" member.
- adjust kmalloc core routines to use current->alloc_tag->cache instead
  of using the global buckets.

This would get us fully separated allocations, producing better than
type-based levels of granularity, exceeding what we have currently with
CONFIG_RANDOM_KMALLOC_CACHES.

Does this look possible, or am I misunderstanding something in the
infrastructure being created here?

-- 
Kees Cook

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