The auditing of addresses currently doesn't include the source address
and mixes source and foreign/peer under the same audit name. Fix this
so source is always addr, and the foreign/peer is peer_addr.
Fixes: c05e705812 ("apparmor: add fine grained af_unix mediation")
Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
The use of the double lock is not necessary and problematic. Instead
pull the bits that need locks into their own sections and grab the
needed references.
Fixes: c05e705812 ("apparmor: add fine grained af_unix mediation")
Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
Fine grained unix mediation in Ubuntu used ABI v7, and policy using
this has propogated onto systems where fine grained unix mediation was
not supported. The userspace policy compiler supports downgrading
policy so the policy could be shared without changes.
Unfortunately this had the side effect that policy was not updated for
the none Ubuntu systems and enabling fine grained unix mediation on
those systems means that a new kernel can break a system with existing
policy that worked with the previous kernel. With fine grained af_unix
mediation this regression can easily break the system causing boot to
fail, as it affect unix socket files, non-file based unix sockets, and
dbus communication.
To aoid this regression move fine grained af_unix mediation behind
a new abi. This means that the system's userspace and policy must
be updated to support the new policy before it takes affect and
dropping a new kernel on existing system will not result in a
regression.
The abi bump is done in such a way as existing policy can be activated
on the system by changing the policy abi declaration and existing unix
policy rules will apply. Policy then only needs to be incrementally
updated, can even be backported to existing Ubuntu policy.
Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
Extend af_unix mediation to support fine grained controls based on
the type (abstract, anonymous, fs), the address, and the labeling
on the socket.
This allows for using socket addresses to label and the socket and
control which subjects can communicate.
The unix rule format follows standard apparmor rules except that fs
based unix sockets can be mediated by existing file rules. None fs
unix sockets can be mediated by a unix socket rule. Where The address
of an abstract unix domain socket begins with the @ character, similar
to how they are reported (as paths) by netstat -x. The address then
follows and may contain pattern matching and any characters including
the null character. In apparmor null characters must be specified by
using an escape sequence \000 or \x00. The pattern matching is the
same as is used by file path matching so * will not match / even
though it has no special meaning with in an abstract socket name. Eg.
allow unix addr=@*,
Autobound unix domain sockets have a unix sun_path assigned to them by
the kernel, as such specifying a policy based address is not possible.
The autobinding of sockets can be controlled by specifying the special
auto keyword. Eg.
allow unix addr=auto,
To indicate that the rule only applies to auto binding of unix domain
sockets. It is important to note this only applies to the bind
permission as once the socket is bound to an address it is
indistinguishable from a socket that have an addr bound with a
specified name. When the auto keyword is used with other permissions
or as part of a peer addr it will be replaced with a pattern that can
match an autobound socket. Eg. For some kernels
allow unix rw addr=auto,
It is important to note, this pattern may match abstract sockets that
were not autobound but have an addr that fits what is generated by the
kernel when autobinding a socket.
Anonymous unix domain sockets have no sun_path associated with the
socket address, however it can be specified with the special none
keyword to indicate the rule only applies to anonymous unix domain
sockets. Eg.
allow unix addr=none,
If the address component of a rule is not specified then the rule
applies to autobind, abstract and anonymous sockets.
The label on the socket can be compared using the standard label=
rule conditional. Eg.
allow unix addr=@foo peer=(label=bar),
see man apparmor.d for full syntax description.
Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>