RE: [SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
Some quick thoughts on this subject regarding x86 architecture: - I think we need to define better the term segment, because you also have selectors in case of flat mode - secondly you can provide some protection mechanism using not only rings but also memory pages and descriptor check, page directory check and page check itself - it's not only the problem of protecting memory areas but also what is a privilege instruction - for example sidt or sldt opcodes used today for identifying VMWare-alike environments - accessing other ranges of memory like I/O ports Just my 2 cents... Regards, Alex Czarnowski AVET INS ___ Secure Coding mailing list (SC-L) SC-L@securecoding.org List information, subscriptions, etc - http://krvw.com/mailman/listinfo/sc-l List charter available at - http://www.securecoding.org/list/charter.php
Re: [SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
On Mon, 03 Apr 2006 09:02:27 -0700, Crispin Cowan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Of particular and critical interest at this juncture is segmented > memory. Graybeards love segmented memory, and modern Linux kidz hate > segmented memory. A close friend has observed to me that 100% of A1 > evaluated operating systems (both of them :) used segmented memory. In > stark contrast, all modern operating systems use paged memory instead. > Apparently there was a movement to hack segments into the Linux kernel a > year or so ago, but it was quickly shouted down. > I'll respond more later to the rest of your post, but this merits comments now. First, segmentation and paging are not mutually exclusive. Multics itself used both; I believe that Pentiums are also capable of both. Second, the two concepts serve different purposes. Segments are a user-visible concept (and the key point is that the hardware address arithmetic does not have a carry between the high-order bit of the offset into the low-order bit of the segment number); paging is (mostly) invisbible to the user and primarily is used to (apparently) expand physical RAM. The problem with segmentation, though, is that it does limit the (easy) size of an object. Think back to the 286, when segments are much smaller. 64-bit machines are a great place to use segments, though, since it's (probably) at least 10 years before we run into the problem again... --Steven M. Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb ___ Secure Coding mailing list (SC-L) SC-L@securecoding.org List information, subscriptions, etc - http://krvw.com/mailman/listinfo/sc-l List charter available at - http://www.securecoding.org/list/charter.php
Re: [SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
Crispin Cowan wrote: Of particular and critical interest at this juncture is segmented memory. Graybeards love segmented memory, and modern Linux kidz hate segmented memory. A close friend has observed to me that 100% of A1 evaluated operating systems (both of them :) used segmented memory. In stark contrast, all modern operating systems use paged memory instead. Apparently there was a movement to hack segments into the Linux kernel a year or so ago, but it was quickly shouted down. ... What? I thought I had the right x86 brain-damage, and knew what segments were. But it doesn't sound like what you are describing. My memory of segments has to do with a painful way to address 64K at a time on 16-bit DOS. As opposed to a nice flat 32-bit (or more) address space. Are you proposing that were I to access a memory address with DS: that I get one set of privs, and if I used ESI: I get a different set? And what does that have to do with paging, which I thought had to do with mapping between physical and logical memory? I'm not trying to flame you Crispin, I'd be willing to bet money that I'm the one who knows less in this area. But I don't think you're explaining what you are getting at well. Please spell it out for me. BB ___ Secure Coding mailing list (SC-L) SC-L@securecoding.org List information, subscriptions, etc - http://krvw.com/mailman/listinfo/sc-l List charter available at - http://www.securecoding.org/list/charter.php
Re: [SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
My comments are interleaved below: Crispin Cowan writes: > > >PGN cites many of the things that Multics did right and history did not >follow. Most of these issues are sufficiently entrenched in legacy >hardware and software that there is little chance to change them any >time soon. > >Of particular and critical interest at this juncture is segmented >memory. Graybeards love segmented memory, and modern Linux kidz hate >segmented memory. A close friend has observed to me that 100% of A1 >evaluated operating systems (both of them :) used segmented memory. In >stark contrast, all modern operating systems use paged memory instead. >Apparently there was a movement to hack segments into the Linux kernel a >year or so ago, but it was quickly shouted down. > >Even if we could convince kernel developers to try segments, the only >hardware architectures left that still support segmented memory (x86) >are about to go extinct. x86-64 offerings from Intel and AMD have >removed the segmented memory functionality from the instruction set, and >they have no plans to put it back. Why should they, if approximately >zero operating systems will use the facility. Conversely, why should OS >developers muck about with segmentation if hardware supporting it is >about to become extinct? A classic chicken/egg problem in reverse, where >it is possible to do now, but about to die out because no one cares. > >This leads me to 2 questions: > > 1. Is it remotely possible to start a ground-swell of interest in > segmentation, get keen software running on x86 CPUs, and do it > soon enough to interest Intel or AMD in re-enabling segmentation > support in their future x86-64 CPUs? Actually, there are still current processors that have segments. The IBM zSeries and iSeries both have segments, and iSeries actually uses them. For those not up on the latest IBM trademarks, zSeries is the latest incarnation of the old 360/370 series mainframes, and iSeries used to be called System/38 and then AS/400. Also, Unisys still sells systems that are descendents of the old B5000/B6700 legacy. > 2. If the answer to 1 is "no", then is it possible to build a kernel > that offers the A1/EAL7 assurance of something like a Multics > kernel, does it with pages instead of segments? > The DEC A1-secure virtual machine monitor was building an A1 system on the VAX which had no segments. It is certainly possible, although it is harder. >That second question is actually pretty technically deep. What is so >different about paged memory systems that makes them harder to secure >than segmented memory systems? My conjecture: it is the granularity of >the memory blobs. Consider: > >* In a segmented system, you have a small number of fairly large > memory objects (segments). Segments are hefty enough that they can > be of variable size, and also can have security tags describing > their security level at multiple levels. So a given segment can be > tagged as being security level 1, 2, 3, and so forth, and the TCB > need only check the level before granting or denying access. >* In a paged system, in contrast, you have a very large number of > much smaller memory objects (pages). Pages are simple, even having > fixed size. Fixed size wastes memory, but no one cares because the > pages are small enough that it doesn't hurt much. Because pages > are simple, you cannot tag them with a bunch of different security > levels. For that matter, x86 architectures only recently got a > (kind-of) ability to distinguish between read and execute > permissions per page, so asking associate and store security > levels per page in hardware is likely more than the TLB can handle. > Actually, the real benefit of segments is not the granularity so much as the isolation. The Alpha chip had separate read, write, and execute permission bits for every page table entry, and that was NOT a problem for the TLB. It was just the VAX and the x86 that had short-sightedly omitted an execute permission bit. Most other virtual memory processors had all three. It is just unfortunate that the two architectures that didn't became extremely popular, compared to all of the others. Where segmentation really helps is that you have a variable length structure that you cannot address off the end. If you quote a segment offset that is bigger than the maximum size of the segment, you either get an immediate addressing error, or the address wraps around within the segment. On the Burroughs B6700, you got the addressing error. On Multics, the address wrapped around within the same segment. In either case, a bad segment offset could NOT cause you to reference a different protected object. On the DEC A1-secure VMM, we put guard pages around objects, but that is NOT sufficient. A reference that goes way beyond the guard page would still work. The zSeries (360/370) segments have the same problem. Y
Re: [SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
> So, if we hope to have a truly high security operating system in our > lifetimes, then one of several things will have to happen: > * [...] > * [...] > * Someone develops a security kernel that effectively fakes > segmentation in software using conventional pages, *and* they > get it evaluated up to EAL7. Strictly speaking, you don't need to have it evaluated for it to be high security. Evaluation does not give the security; it gives confidence in the security (or lack thereof, if it flunks). Okay, okay, /~\ The ASCII der Mouse \ / Ribbon Campaign X Against HTML [EMAIL PROTECTED] / \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39 4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B ___ Secure Coding mailing list (SC-L) SC-L@securecoding.org List information, subscriptions, etc - http://krvw.com/mailman/listinfo/sc-l List charter available at - http://www.securecoding.org/list/charter.php
RE: [SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
Or consider the IBM Mainframe and z/OS Operating Systems - protected memory and paging together - also privileged programs vs. application programs, also prefetched programs vs loaded on demand programs. Mike Hines Mainframe Systems Programmer --- Michael S Hines [EMAIL PROTECTED] ___ Secure Coding mailing list (SC-L) SC-L@securecoding.org List information, subscriptions, etc - http://krvw.com/mailman/listinfo/sc-l List charter available at - http://www.securecoding.org/list/charter.php
Re: [SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
At 9:02 AM -0700 4/3/06, Crispin Cowan wrote: > That second question is actually pretty technically deep. What is so > different about paged memory systems that makes them harder to secure > than segmented memory systems? My conjecture: it is the granularity of > the memory blobs. Consider: > > * In a segmented system, you have a small number of fairly large > memory objects (segments). Segments are hefty enough that they can > be of variable size, and also can have security tags describing > their security level at multiple levels. So a given segment can be > tagged as being security level 1, 2, 3, and so forth, and the TCB > need only check the level before granting or denying access. > * In a paged system, in contrast, you have a very large number of > much smaller memory objects (pages). Pages are simple, even having > fixed size. Fixed size wastes memory, but no one cares because the > pages are small enough that it doesn't hurt much. Because pages > are simple, you cannot tag them with a bunch of different security > levels. For that matter, x86 architectures only recently got a > (kind-of) ability to distinguish between read and execute > permissions per page, so asking associate and store security > levels per page in hardware is likely more than the TLB can handle. I will admit to not knowing much about hardware, but you seem to be discussing a TCB implemented in software. Consider the VAX/Alpha/Itanium on which VMS runs. As a user program I access pages, but I don't think of them in those terms. I think of them as Sections (some are Global) which contain the read-only part of one shareable image, my own DCL symbols, etc. Those sections to which I have access are in my virtual address space protected so I have that access to which I am entitled. What is disturbing about that hardware ? Is it the fact that the operating system is really setting individual page protections rather than a whole segment at a time ? I realize you probably want more levels and compartments, but that does not seem to me to make the task untenable. Educate me. -- Larry Kilgallen ___ Secure Coding mailing list (SC-L) SC-L@securecoding.org List information, subscriptions, etc - http://krvw.com/mailman/listinfo/sc-l List charter available at - http://www.securecoding.org/list/charter.php
[SC-L] Segments, eh Smithers?
PGN cites many of the things that Multics did right and history did not follow. Most of these issues are sufficiently entrenched in legacy hardware and software that there is little chance to change them any time soon. Of particular and critical interest at this juncture is segmented memory. Graybeards love segmented memory, and modern Linux kidz hate segmented memory. A close friend has observed to me that 100% of A1 evaluated operating systems (both of them :) used segmented memory. In stark contrast, all modern operating systems use paged memory instead. Apparently there was a movement to hack segments into the Linux kernel a year or so ago, but it was quickly shouted down. Even if we could convince kernel developers to try segments, the only hardware architectures left that still support segmented memory (x86) are about to go extinct. x86-64 offerings from Intel and AMD have removed the segmented memory functionality from the instruction set, and they have no plans to put it back. Why should they, if approximately zero operating systems will use the facility. Conversely, why should OS developers muck about with segmentation if hardware supporting it is about to become extinct? A classic chicken/egg problem in reverse, where it is possible to do now, but about to die out because no one cares. This leads me to 2 questions: 1. Is it remotely possible to start a ground-swell of interest in segmentation, get keen software running on x86 CPUs, and do it soon enough to interest Intel or AMD in re-enabling segmentation support in their future x86-64 CPUs? 2. If the answer to 1 is "no", then is it possible to build a kernel that offers the A1/EAL7 assurance of something like a Multics kernel, does it with pages instead of segments? That second question is actually pretty technically deep. What is so different about paged memory systems that makes them harder to secure than segmented memory systems? My conjecture: it is the granularity of the memory blobs. Consider: * In a segmented system, you have a small number of fairly large memory objects (segments). Segments are hefty enough that they can be of variable size, and also can have security tags describing their security level at multiple levels. So a given segment can be tagged as being security level 1, 2, 3, and so forth, and the TCB need only check the level before granting or denying access. * In a paged system, in contrast, you have a very large number of much smaller memory objects (pages). Pages are simple, even having fixed size. Fixed size wastes memory, but no one cares because the pages are small enough that it doesn't hurt much. Because pages are simple, you cannot tag them with a bunch of different security levels. For that matter, x86 architectures only recently got a (kind-of) ability to distinguish between read and execute permissions per page, so asking associate and store security levels per page in hardware is likely more than the TLB can handle. So, if we hope to have a truly high security operating system in our lifetimes, then one of several things will have to happen: * Intel and/or AMD reinstate segmentation support in x86-64. * Intel and/or AMD introduce a fancy paging hardware system that supports multiple security levels per page, *and* a secure kernel is developed that takes advantage of these page security levels to give us highly secure memory access control. * Someone develops a security kernel that effectively fakes segmentation in software using conventional pages, *and* they get it evaluated up to EAL7. None of which seem likely. So, I suspect that my career path of providing retro-fit security for fundamentally insecure systems like C (StackGuard) and the UNIX family (AppArmor) might have some legs to it :) Crispin Peter G. Neumann wrote: > Der Mouse is barking up the right rathole. > > *** BEGIN SOAPBOX *** > > Having cut my security eye-teeth in Multics from 1965 to 1969, I am > continually drawn back into discussions of what Multics did right that > has been systematically (!) ignored by almost all subsequent operating > systems. For the younger folks among the SC-L audience, let me mention > a few of the architectural strengths. There were no buffer overflows in > the stack, because anything out of the stack frame was not executable. > The ring-structured domain architecture and file system access controls > permitted straightforward sandboxing. Dynamic linking and revocation > were fundamental. Segmentation and paging enabled layers of virtual > machines and protected virtual memory. The I/O system had virtual > stream names, virtual I/O, and common device-driver software where > appropriate, coupled with separate hardware for the input-output > controller (GIOC). The programming language was the stark EPL subset of > PL/I and the correspond