On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 10:39:35AM +0100, Erik Skultety wrote:
Hi,
this is a summary of a private discussion I've had with guys CC'd on this email
about finding a solution to [1] - basically, the default permissions on
/dev/sev (below) make it impossible to query for SEV platform capabilities,
since by default we run QEMU as qemu:qemu when probing for capabilities. It's
worth noting is that this is only relevant to probing, since for a proper QEMU
VM we create a mount namespace for the process and chown all the nodes (needs a
SEV fix though).
# ll /dev/sev
crw-------. 1 root root
I suggested either force running QEMU as root for probing (despite the obvious
security implications) or using namespaces for probing too. Dan argued that
this would have a significant perf impact and suggested we ask systemd to add a
global udev rule.
I've just realized there is a potential 3rd solution. Remember there is
actually nothing inherantly special about the 'root' user as an account
ID. 'root' gains its powers from the fact that it has many capabilities
by default. 'qemu' can't access /dev/sev because it is owned by a
different user (happens to be root) and 'qemu' does not have capabilities.
So we can make probing work by using our capabilities code to grant
CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE to the qemu process we spawn. So probing still runs
as 'qemu', but can none the less access /dev/sev while it is owned
by root. We were not using 'qemu' for sake of security, as the probing
process is not executing any untrusthworthy code, so we don't loose any
security protection by granting CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE.
I proceeded with cloning [1] to systemd and creating an udev rule
that I planned
on submitting to systemd upstream - the initial idea was to mimic /dev/kvm and
make it world accessible to which Brijesh from AMD expressed a concern that
regular users might deplete the resources (limit on the number of guests
allowed by the platform). But since the limit is claimed to be around 4, Dan
discouraged me to continue with restricting the udev rule to only the 'kvm'
group which Laszlo suggested earlier as the limit is so small that a malicious
QEMU could easily deplete this during probing. This fact also ruled out any
kind of ACL we could create dynamically. Instead, he suggested that we filter
out the kvm-capable QEMU and put only that one in the namespace without a
significant perf impact.
Yes, my suggestion to mimic /dev/kvm was based on the mistaken mis-understanding
that there was not a finite resource limit. Given that there are one or more
finite resource limits, we need access control on which unprivileged users, and
/or which individual QEMU instances are permitted access. This means /dev/sev
must remain with restrictive user/group/permissions that prevent any unprivilegd
account from having access. This means either root:root 0770/0700, or possibly
having an 'sev' group and using root:sev 0770, so that users can be granted
access via 'sev' group membership which (might?) allow unprivileged libvirtd to
use 'sev' if the user was added.
- my take on this is that there could potentially be more than a
single
kvm-enabled QEMU and therefore we'd need to create more than just a
single namespace.
True, I guess qemu-system-x86_64 and qemu-system-i386 both get KVM
on an x86_64 host, and likewise for many other 64-bit archs supporting.
32-bit apps.
- I also argued that I can image that the same kind of DOS attack
might be
possible from within the namespace, even if we created the /dev/sev node
only in SEV-enabled guests (which we currently don't). All of us have
agreed that allowing /dev/sev in the namespace for only SEV-enabled
guests is worth doing nonetheless.
There's never any perfect level of protection. We're just striving to
minimize the attack surface by only exposing it where there's a genuine
need to use it.
In the meantime, Christophe went through the kernel code to verify
how the SEV
resources are managed and what protection is currently in place to mitigate the
chance of a process easily depleting the limit on SEV guests. He found that
ASID, which determines the encryption key, is allocated from a single ASID
bitmap and essentially guarded by a single 'sev->active' flag.
So, in conclusion, we absolutely need input from Brijesh (AMD) whether there
was something more than the low limit on number of guests behind the default
permissions. Also, we'd like to get some details on how the limit is managed,
helping to assess the approaches mentioned above.
Regardless of this problem, I think it is important to have some docs
in either libvirt or QEMU that describe the resource usage constraints
so that management apps can decide how to best take advantage of SEV.
Regards,
Daniel
--
|:
https://berrange.com -o-
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dberrange :|
|:
https://libvirt.org -o-
https://fstop138.berrange.com :|
|:
https://entangle-photo.org -o-
https://www.instagram.com/dberrange :|