]> git.proxmox.com Git - mirror_ubuntu-artful-kernel.git/blame - Documentation/security/credentials.rst
x86/bugs: Rework spec_ctrl base and mask logic
[mirror_ubuntu-artful-kernel.git] / Documentation / security / credentials.rst
CommitLineData
af777cd1
KC
1====================
2Credentials in Linux
3====================
98870ab0
DH
4
5By: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
6
af777cd1 7.. contents:: :local:
98870ab0 8
af777cd1 9Overview
98870ab0
DH
10========
11
12There are several parts to the security check performed by Linux when one
13object acts upon another:
14
af777cd1 15 1. Objects.
98870ab0
DH
16
17 Objects are things in the system that may be acted upon directly by
18 userspace programs. Linux has a variety of actionable objects, including:
19
20 - Tasks
21 - Files/inodes
22 - Sockets
23 - Message queues
24 - Shared memory segments
25 - Semaphores
26 - Keys
27
28 As a part of the description of all these objects there is a set of
29 credentials. What's in the set depends on the type of object.
30
af777cd1 31 2. Object ownership.
98870ab0
DH
32
33 Amongst the credentials of most objects, there will be a subset that
34 indicates the ownership of that object. This is used for resource
35 accounting and limitation (disk quotas and task rlimits for example).
36
37 In a standard UNIX filesystem, for instance, this will be defined by the
38 UID marked on the inode.
39
af777cd1 40 3. The objective context.
98870ab0
DH
41
42 Also amongst the credentials of those objects, there will be a subset that
43 indicates the 'objective context' of that object. This may or may not be
44 the same set as in (2) - in standard UNIX files, for instance, this is the
45 defined by the UID and the GID marked on the inode.
46
47 The objective context is used as part of the security calculation that is
48 carried out when an object is acted upon.
49
af777cd1 50 4. Subjects.
98870ab0
DH
51
52 A subject is an object that is acting upon another object.
53
54 Most of the objects in the system are inactive: they don't act on other
55 objects within the system. Processes/tasks are the obvious exception:
56 they do stuff; they access and manipulate things.
57
58 Objects other than tasks may under some circumstances also be subjects.
59 For instance an open file may send SIGIO to a task using the UID and EUID
af777cd1 60 given to it by a task that called ``fcntl(F_SETOWN)`` upon it. In this case,
98870ab0
DH
61 the file struct will have a subjective context too.
62
af777cd1 63 5. The subjective context.
98870ab0
DH
64
65 A subject has an additional interpretation of its credentials. A subset
66 of its credentials forms the 'subjective context'. The subjective context
67 is used as part of the security calculation that is carried out when a
68 subject acts.
69
70 A Linux task, for example, has the FSUID, FSGID and the supplementary
71 group list for when it is acting upon a file - which are quite separate
72 from the real UID and GID that normally form the objective context of the
73 task.
74
af777cd1 75 6. Actions.
98870ab0
DH
76
77 Linux has a number of actions available that a subject may perform upon an
78 object. The set of actions available depends on the nature of the subject
79 and the object.
80
81 Actions include reading, writing, creating and deleting files; forking or
82 signalling and tracing tasks.
83
af777cd1 84 7. Rules, access control lists and security calculations.
98870ab0
DH
85
86 When a subject acts upon an object, a security calculation is made. This
87 involves taking the subjective context, the objective context and the
88 action, and searching one or more sets of rules to see whether the subject
89 is granted or denied permission to act in the desired manner on the
90 object, given those contexts.
91
92 There are two main sources of rules:
93
af777cd1 94 a. Discretionary access control (DAC):
98870ab0
DH
95
96 Sometimes the object will include sets of rules as part of its
97 description. This is an 'Access Control List' or 'ACL'. A Linux
98 file may supply more than one ACL.
99
100 A traditional UNIX file, for example, includes a permissions mask that
101 is an abbreviated ACL with three fixed classes of subject ('user',
102 'group' and 'other'), each of which may be granted certain privileges
103 ('read', 'write' and 'execute' - whatever those map to for the object
104 in question). UNIX file permissions do not allow the arbitrary
105 specification of subjects, however, and so are of limited use.
106
107 A Linux file might also sport a POSIX ACL. This is a list of rules
108 that grants various permissions to arbitrary subjects.
109
af777cd1 110 b. Mandatory access control (MAC):
98870ab0
DH
111
112 The system as a whole may have one or more sets of rules that get
113 applied to all subjects and objects, regardless of their source.
114 SELinux and Smack are examples of this.
115
116 In the case of SELinux and Smack, each object is given a label as part
117 of its credentials. When an action is requested, they take the
118 subject label, the object label and the action and look for a rule
119 that says that this action is either granted or denied.
120
121
af777cd1 122Types of Credentials
98870ab0
DH
123====================
124
125The Linux kernel supports the following types of credentials:
126
af777cd1 127 1. Traditional UNIX credentials.
98870ab0 128
af777cd1
KC
129 - Real User ID
130 - Real Group ID
98870ab0
DH
131
132 The UID and GID are carried by most, if not all, Linux objects, even if in
133 some cases it has to be invented (FAT or CIFS files for example, which are
134 derived from Windows). These (mostly) define the objective context of
135 that object, with tasks being slightly different in some cases.
136
af777cd1
KC
137 - Effective, Saved and FS User ID
138 - Effective, Saved and FS Group ID
139 - Supplementary groups
98870ab0
DH
140
141 These are additional credentials used by tasks only. Usually, an
142 EUID/EGID/GROUPS will be used as the subjective context, and real UID/GID
143 will be used as the objective. For tasks, it should be noted that this is
144 not always true.
145
af777cd1 146 2. Capabilities.
98870ab0 147
af777cd1
KC
148 - Set of permitted capabilities
149 - Set of inheritable capabilities
150 - Set of effective capabilities
151 - Capability bounding set
98870ab0
DH
152
153 These are only carried by tasks. They indicate superior capabilities
154 granted piecemeal to a task that an ordinary task wouldn't otherwise have.
155 These are manipulated implicitly by changes to the traditional UNIX
af777cd1
KC
156 credentials, but can also be manipulated directly by the ``capset()``
157 system call.
98870ab0
DH
158
159 The permitted capabilities are those caps that the process might grant
af777cd1 160 itself to its effective or permitted sets through ``capset()``. This
98870ab0
DH
161 inheritable set might also be so constrained.
162
163 The effective capabilities are the ones that a task is actually allowed to
164 make use of itself.
165
166 The inheritable capabilities are the ones that may get passed across
af777cd1 167 ``execve()``.
98870ab0
DH
168
169 The bounding set limits the capabilities that may be inherited across
af777cd1
KC
170 ``execve()``, especially when a binary is executed that will execute as
171 UID 0.
98870ab0 172
af777cd1 173 3. Secure management flags (securebits).
98870ab0
DH
174
175 These are only carried by tasks. These govern the way the above
176 credentials are manipulated and inherited over certain operations such as
177 execve(). They aren't used directly as objective or subjective
178 credentials.
179
af777cd1 180 4. Keys and keyrings.
98870ab0
DH
181
182 These are only carried by tasks. They carry and cache security tokens
183 that don't fit into the other standard UNIX credentials. They are for
184 making such things as network filesystem keys available to the file
185 accesses performed by processes, without the necessity of ordinary
186 programs having to know about security details involved.
187
188 Keyrings are a special type of key. They carry sets of other keys and can
189 be searched for the desired key. Each process may subscribe to a number
190 of keyrings:
191
192 Per-thread keying
193 Per-process keyring
194 Per-session keyring
195
196 When a process accesses a key, if not already present, it will normally be
197 cached on one of these keyrings for future accesses to find.
198
d410fa4e 199 For more information on using keys, see Documentation/security/keys.txt.
98870ab0 200
af777cd1 201 5. LSM
98870ab0
DH
202
203 The Linux Security Module allows extra controls to be placed over the
e163bc8e
KC
204 operations that a task may do. Currently Linux supports several LSM
205 options.
98870ab0 206
e163bc8e 207 Some work by labelling the objects in a system and then applying sets of
98870ab0
DH
208 rules (policies) that say what operations a task with one label may do to
209 an object with another label.
210
af777cd1 211 6. AF_KEY
98870ab0
DH
212
213 This is a socket-based approach to credential management for networking
214 stacks [RFC 2367]. It isn't discussed by this document as it doesn't
215 interact directly with task and file credentials; rather it keeps system
216 level credentials.
217
218
219When a file is opened, part of the opening task's subjective context is
220recorded in the file struct created. This allows operations using that file
221struct to use those credentials instead of the subjective context of the task
222that issued the operation. An example of this would be a file opened on a
223network filesystem where the credentials of the opened file should be presented
224to the server, regardless of who is actually doing a read or a write upon it.
225
226
af777cd1 227File Markings
98870ab0
DH
228=============
229
230Files on disk or obtained over the network may have annotations that form the
231objective security context of that file. Depending on the type of filesystem,
232this may include one or more of the following:
233
af777cd1
KC
234 * UNIX UID, GID, mode;
235 * Windows user ID;
236 * Access control list;
237 * LSM security label;
238 * UNIX exec privilege escalation bits (SUID/SGID);
239 * File capabilities exec privilege escalation bits.
98870ab0
DH
240
241These are compared to the task's subjective security context, and certain
242operations allowed or disallowed as a result. In the case of execve(), the
243privilege escalation bits come into play, and may allow the resulting process
244extra privileges, based on the annotations on the executable file.
245
246
af777cd1 247Task Credentials
98870ab0
DH
248================
249
250In Linux, all of a task's credentials are held in (uid, gid) or through
251(groups, keys, LSM security) a refcounted structure of type 'struct cred'.
252Each task points to its credentials by a pointer called 'cred' in its
253task_struct.
254
255Once a set of credentials has been prepared and committed, it may not be
256changed, barring the following exceptions:
257
af777cd1 258 1. its reference count may be changed;
98870ab0 259
af777cd1 260 2. the reference count on the group_info struct it points to may be changed;
98870ab0 261
af777cd1 262 3. the reference count on the security data it points to may be changed;
98870ab0 263
af777cd1 264 4. the reference count on any keyrings it points to may be changed;
98870ab0 265
af777cd1
KC
266 5. any keyrings it points to may be revoked, expired or have their security
267 attributes changed; and
98870ab0 268
af777cd1
KC
269 6. the contents of any keyrings to which it points may be changed (the whole
270 point of keyrings being a shared set of credentials, modifiable by anyone
271 with appropriate access).
98870ab0
DH
272
273To alter anything in the cred struct, the copy-and-replace principle must be
274adhered to. First take a copy, then alter the copy and then use RCU to change
275the task pointer to make it point to the new copy. There are wrappers to aid
276with this (see below).
277
278A task may only alter its _own_ credentials; it is no longer permitted for a
af777cd1
KC
279task to alter another's credentials. This means the ``capset()`` system call
280is no longer permitted to take any PID other than the one of the current
281process. Also ``keyctl_instantiate()`` and ``keyctl_negate()`` functions no
282longer permit attachment to process-specific keyrings in the requesting
283process as the instantiating process may need to create them.
98870ab0
DH
284
285
af777cd1 286Immutable Credentials
98870ab0
DH
287---------------------
288
af777cd1
KC
289Once a set of credentials has been made public (by calling ``commit_creds()``
290for example), it must be considered immutable, barring two exceptions:
98870ab0 291
af777cd1 292 1. The reference count may be altered.
98870ab0 293
af777cd1
KC
294 2. Whilst the keyring subscriptions of a set of credentials may not be
295 changed, the keyrings subscribed to may have their contents altered.
98870ab0
DH
296
297To catch accidental credential alteration at compile time, struct task_struct
298has _const_ pointers to its credential sets, as does struct file. Furthermore,
af777cd1
KC
299certain functions such as ``get_cred()`` and ``put_cred()`` operate on const
300pointers, thus rendering casts unnecessary, but require to temporarily ditch
301the const qualification to be able to alter the reference count.
98870ab0
DH
302
303
af777cd1 304Accessing Task Credentials
98870ab0
DH
305--------------------------
306
307A task being able to alter only its own credentials permits the current process
308to read or replace its own credentials without the need for any form of locking
af777cd1 309-- which simplifies things greatly. It can just call::
98870ab0
DH
310
311 const struct cred *current_cred()
312
313to get a pointer to its credentials structure, and it doesn't have to release
314it afterwards.
315
316There are convenience wrappers for retrieving specific aspects of a task's
af777cd1 317credentials (the value is simply returned in each case)::
98870ab0
DH
318
319 uid_t current_uid(void) Current's real UID
320 gid_t current_gid(void) Current's real GID
321 uid_t current_euid(void) Current's effective UID
322 gid_t current_egid(void) Current's effective GID
323 uid_t current_fsuid(void) Current's file access UID
324 gid_t current_fsgid(void) Current's file access GID
325 kernel_cap_t current_cap(void) Current's effective capabilities
326 void *current_security(void) Current's LSM security pointer
327 struct user_struct *current_user(void) Current's user account
328
329There are also convenience wrappers for retrieving specific associated pairs of
af777cd1 330a task's credentials::
98870ab0
DH
331
332 void current_uid_gid(uid_t *, gid_t *);
333 void current_euid_egid(uid_t *, gid_t *);
334 void current_fsuid_fsgid(uid_t *, gid_t *);
335
336which return these pairs of values through their arguments after retrieving
337them from the current task's credentials.
338
339
340In addition, there is a function for obtaining a reference on the current
af777cd1 341process's current set of credentials::
98870ab0
DH
342
343 const struct cred *get_current_cred(void);
344
345and functions for getting references to one of the credentials that don't
af777cd1 346actually live in struct cred::
98870ab0
DH
347
348 struct user_struct *get_current_user(void);
349 struct group_info *get_current_groups(void);
350
351which get references to the current process's user accounting structure and
352supplementary groups list respectively.
353
af777cd1
KC
354Once a reference has been obtained, it must be released with ``put_cred()``,
355``free_uid()`` or ``put_group_info()`` as appropriate.
98870ab0
DH
356
357
af777cd1 358Accessing Another Task's Credentials
98870ab0
DH
359------------------------------------
360
361Whilst a task may access its own credentials without the need for locking, the
362same is not true of a task wanting to access another task's credentials. It
af777cd1 363must use the RCU read lock and ``rcu_dereference()``.
98870ab0 364
af777cd1 365The ``rcu_dereference()`` is wrapped by::
98870ab0
DH
366
367 const struct cred *__task_cred(struct task_struct *task);
368
af777cd1 369This should be used inside the RCU read lock, as in the following example::
98870ab0
DH
370
371 void foo(struct task_struct *t, struct foo_data *f)
372 {
373 const struct cred *tcred;
374 ...
375 rcu_read_lock();
376 tcred = __task_cred(t);
377 f->uid = tcred->uid;
378 f->gid = tcred->gid;
379 f->groups = get_group_info(tcred->groups);
380 rcu_read_unlock();
381 ...
382 }
383
98870ab0
DH
384Should it be necessary to hold another task's credentials for a long period of
385time, and possibly to sleep whilst doing so, then the caller should get a
af777cd1 386reference on them using::
98870ab0
DH
387
388 const struct cred *get_task_cred(struct task_struct *task);
389
390This does all the RCU magic inside of it. The caller must call put_cred() on
391the credentials so obtained when they're finished with.
392
af777cd1
KC
393.. note::
394 The result of ``__task_cred()`` should not be passed directly to
395 ``get_cred()`` as this may race with ``commit_cred()``.
8f92054e 396
98870ab0 397There are a couple of convenience functions to access bits of another task's
af777cd1 398credentials, hiding the RCU magic from the caller::
98870ab0
DH
399
400 uid_t task_uid(task) Task's real UID
401 uid_t task_euid(task) Task's effective UID
402
af777cd1 403If the caller is holding the RCU read lock at the time anyway, then::
98870ab0
DH
404
405 __task_cred(task)->uid
406 __task_cred(task)->euid
407
408should be used instead. Similarly, if multiple aspects of a task's credentials
af777cd1
KC
409need to be accessed, RCU read lock should be used, ``__task_cred()`` called,
410the result stored in a temporary pointer and then the credential aspects called
b03df87d
SH
411from that before dropping the lock. This prevents the potentially expensive
412RCU magic from being invoked multiple times.
98870ab0
DH
413
414Should some other single aspect of another task's credentials need to be
af777cd1 415accessed, then this can be used::
98870ab0
DH
416
417 task_cred_xxx(task, member)
418
af777cd1 419where 'member' is a non-pointer member of the cred struct. For instance::
98870ab0
DH
420
421 uid_t task_cred_xxx(task, suid);
422
423will retrieve 'struct cred::suid' from the task, doing the appropriate RCU
424magic. This may not be used for pointer members as what they point to may
425disappear the moment the RCU read lock is dropped.
426
427
af777cd1 428Altering Credentials
98870ab0
DH
429--------------------
430
431As previously mentioned, a task may only alter its own credentials, and may not
432alter those of another task. This means that it doesn't need to use any
433locking to alter its own credentials.
434
435To alter the current process's credentials, a function should first prepare a
af777cd1 436new set of credentials by calling::
98870ab0
DH
437
438 struct cred *prepare_creds(void);
439
440this locks current->cred_replace_mutex and then allocates and constructs a
441duplicate of the current process's credentials, returning with the mutex still
442held if successful. It returns NULL if not successful (out of memory).
443
af777cd1
KC
444The mutex prevents ``ptrace()`` from altering the ptrace state of a process
445whilst security checks on credentials construction and changing is taking place
446as the ptrace state may alter the outcome, particularly in the case of
447``execve()``.
98870ab0
DH
448
449The new credentials set should be altered appropriately, and any security
450checks and hooks done. Both the current and the proposed sets of credentials
451are available for this purpose as current_cred() will return the current set
452still at this point.
453
454
455When the credential set is ready, it should be committed to the current process
af777cd1 456by calling::
98870ab0
DH
457
458 int commit_creds(struct cred *new);
459
460This will alter various aspects of the credentials and the process, giving the
af777cd1
KC
461LSM a chance to do likewise, then it will use ``rcu_assign_pointer()`` to
462actually commit the new credentials to ``current->cred``, it will release
463``current->cred_replace_mutex`` to allow ``ptrace()`` to take place, and it
464will notify the scheduler and others of the changes.
98870ab0
DH
465
466This function is guaranteed to return 0, so that it can be tail-called at the
af777cd1 467end of such functions as ``sys_setresuid()``.
98870ab0
DH
468
469Note that this function consumes the caller's reference to the new credentials.
af777cd1 470The caller should _not_ call ``put_cred()`` on the new credentials afterwards.
98870ab0
DH
471
472Furthermore, once this function has been called on a new set of credentials,
473those credentials may _not_ be changed further.
474
475
af777cd1
KC
476Should the security checks fail or some other error occur after
477``prepare_creds()`` has been called, then the following function should be
478invoked::
98870ab0
DH
479
480 void abort_creds(struct cred *new);
481
af777cd1
KC
482This releases the lock on ``current->cred_replace_mutex`` that
483``prepare_creds()`` got and then releases the new credentials.
98870ab0
DH
484
485
af777cd1 486A typical credentials alteration function would look something like this::
98870ab0
DH
487
488 int alter_suid(uid_t suid)
489 {
490 struct cred *new;
491 int ret;
492
493 new = prepare_creds();
494 if (!new)
495 return -ENOMEM;
496
497 new->suid = suid;
498 ret = security_alter_suid(new);
499 if (ret < 0) {
500 abort_creds(new);
501 return ret;
502 }
503
504 return commit_creds(new);
505 }
506
507
af777cd1 508Managing Credentials
98870ab0
DH
509--------------------
510
511There are some functions to help manage credentials:
512
af777cd1 513 - ``void put_cred(const struct cred *cred);``
98870ab0
DH
514
515 This releases a reference to the given set of credentials. If the
516 reference count reaches zero, the credentials will be scheduled for
517 destruction by the RCU system.
518
af777cd1 519 - ``const struct cred *get_cred(const struct cred *cred);``
98870ab0
DH
520
521 This gets a reference on a live set of credentials, returning a pointer to
522 that set of credentials.
523
af777cd1 524 - ``struct cred *get_new_cred(struct cred *cred);``
98870ab0
DH
525
526 This gets a reference on a set of credentials that is under construction
527 and is thus still mutable, returning a pointer to that set of credentials.
528
529
af777cd1 530Open File Credentials
98870ab0
DH
531=====================
532
533When a new file is opened, a reference is obtained on the opening task's
af777cd1
KC
534credentials and this is attached to the file struct as ``f_cred`` in place of
535``f_uid`` and ``f_gid``. Code that used to access ``file->f_uid`` and
536``file->f_gid`` should now access ``file->f_cred->fsuid`` and
537``file->f_cred->fsgid``.
98870ab0 538
af777cd1 539It is safe to access ``f_cred`` without the use of RCU or locking because the
98870ab0
DH
540pointer will not change over the lifetime of the file struct, and nor will the
541contents of the cred struct pointed to, barring the exceptions listed above
542(see the Task Credentials section).
543
544
af777cd1 545Overriding the VFS's Use of Credentials
98870ab0
DH
546=======================================
547
548Under some circumstances it is desirable to override the credentials used by
af777cd1 549the VFS, and that can be done by calling into such as ``vfs_mkdir()`` with a
98870ab0
DH
550different set of credentials. This is done in the following places:
551
af777cd1
KC
552 * ``sys_faccessat()``.
553 * ``do_coredump()``.
554 * nfs4recover.c.