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* Re: [Ksummit-discuss] On the off-chance that my mount() notes are at all useful
       [not found] <20140819173125.GA17432@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
@ 2014-08-24 16:59 ` Andy Lutomirski
  2014-08-25  2:55   ` Paul E. McKenney
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Andy Lutomirski @ 2014-08-24 16:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul McKenney; +Cc: ksummit-discuss

On Tue, Aug 19, 2014 at 10:31 AM, Paul E. McKenney
<paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com> wrote:
> o       Mount based on file descriptor.  Generated from openfs()
>         or some such.  Ted: Want mount(), remount(), bind(), as separate
>         things.
>
>         Have a mountf() for mounting an openfs()ed filesystem.
>
>         Al: Ouch.
>
>         Andy: Want to distinguish between this mount is read-only
>         and the underlying device will no longer be written to.
>
>         Al: Three piles of garbage, not two.  Need to take care about
>         userids and such.  Some of the per-superblock flags are not
>         entirely private to a given filesystem, some are visible
>         to the VFS layer.
>
>         Al: First syscall to start mounting could establish an open
>         descriptor.  But the descriptor would not be a root directory,
>         but rather a channel for talking to a filesystem driver.  Then
>         you can feed the parameters to the filesystem driver as needed,
>         rather than dumping them into the open() system call.
>
>         Al: If you want horrors, look at ncpfs (sp?).  This illustrates
>         why just getting the root directory is wrong.  Root directory
>         is initially empty, after some operations it suddenly has
>         files in it.
>
>         Al: Given that the syscalls are often followed by one another,
>         why have them separated?
>
>         Al: If we are going to have this FD, then we should keep the
>         FD around for the duration.  Closing it would get rid of
>         everything.  Use FD to talk to filesystem driver throughout.
>         Don't need a process to hang around.
>
>         Al: Note that unmount operates purely on the namespace.  You
>         might still have open files on the unmounted filesystem, so
>         the filesystem is still around.
>
>         Some discussion about getting the FD given a mounted filesystem.
>         Interaction between FD and shutdown.
>
>         Al: But if FD is around, someone might remount filesystem.
>         So some hair if using FD to wait for all files from the
>         filesystem to be closed.
>
>         Mount over symlinks?
>
>         Al: Need to be careful here.  Last I looked, this would be
>         extremely painful.  Easier to hide a directory with a symlink
>         than vice versa.
>
>         Discussion of an openat() and security holes.
>
>         Ted: Can pass a directory FD across a UNIX-domain socket and
>         then do openat(), so security issue already exists.  More
>         fun with mountat().
>
>         Al: Completely insane, greatly increases attack surface.
>
>         Ted: FS fuzzers giving bugs are first-class bugs.  But cloud
>         sysadmins might not like the attack surface.
>
>         Serge: Use fuse to mediate security.
>

Here are my notes on features that I want, augmented some by the discussion:

Requirements:

 - Syscalls that just affects mount points

 - Mount by fd.

 - Overmounting / should be useful (e.g. return an fd,
mount-and-chdir, etc.)  Currently, using mount(2) to mount on top of
'/' is mostly useless, because there is no way to chdir to the new
mount, to chroot to it, or to get an fd for it.

 - Cross-ns bind mount.  That is, I want to be able to mount a foreign
fd into my namespace.  This doesn't really need a new API, but it
would be a lot cleaner if we could use SCM_RIGHTS for this without
mucking with /proc/self/fd.

 - Don't follow symlinks, at least optionally.  Al Viro says that
mounting on top of certain types of objects might be impossible, but
I'd like to extend the set of possible overmounts.

 - Clear separation of superblock flags and mount flags.  The
read-only flag is somewhat special, but I think that it can be managed
cleanly.

 - Explicit set/clear mount flags.  Setting the read-only bit
shouldn't involve reading the old flags with a separate syscall.

 - Bind and set/clear flags at the same time.  (e.g. create a new
read-only bind mount atomically.)

 - Leave room for unions.  I'm not sure what this entails.


Here's a possible piece of a new API:

int mount_bind(int sourcefd, int destdfd, const char *destpath, int
opflags, int clearflags, int setflags);

opflags include BINDMNT_CHDIR, AT_NOFOLLOW, etc.  The setflags are
ored into the flags from the source, and the clearflags are cleared.
Other flags are left unchanged.  if (setflags & clearflags), -EINVAL
is returned.


int mount_changebindflags(int dfd, const char *path, int opflags, int
clearflags, int setflags);


Al Viro mentioned that, for a new fs (as opposed to a bind mount), we
want a control fd for a file system, on which we can send commands,
close (i.e. superblock shutdown), and change flags.

--Andy

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread

* Re: [Ksummit-discuss] On the off-chance that my mount() notes are at all useful
  2014-08-24 16:59 ` [Ksummit-discuss] On the off-chance that my mount() notes are at all useful Andy Lutomirski
@ 2014-08-25  2:55   ` Paul E. McKenney
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Paul E. McKenney @ 2014-08-25  2:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andy Lutomirski; +Cc: ksummit-discuss

On Sun, Aug 24, 2014 at 09:59:12AM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 19, 2014 at 10:31 AM, Paul E. McKenney
> <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com> wrote:
> > o       Mount based on file descriptor.  Generated from openfs()
> >         or some such.  Ted: Want mount(), remount(), bind(), as separate
> >         things.
> >
> >         Have a mountf() for mounting an openfs()ed filesystem.
> >
> >         Al: Ouch.
> >
> >         Andy: Want to distinguish between this mount is read-only
> >         and the underlying device will no longer be written to.
> >
> >         Al: Three piles of garbage, not two.  Need to take care about
> >         userids and such.  Some of the per-superblock flags are not
> >         entirely private to a given filesystem, some are visible
> >         to the VFS layer.
> >
> >         Al: First syscall to start mounting could establish an open
> >         descriptor.  But the descriptor would not be a root directory,
> >         but rather a channel for talking to a filesystem driver.  Then
> >         you can feed the parameters to the filesystem driver as needed,
> >         rather than dumping them into the open() system call.
> >
> >         Al: If you want horrors, look at ncpfs (sp?).  This illustrates
> >         why just getting the root directory is wrong.  Root directory
> >         is initially empty, after some operations it suddenly has
> >         files in it.
> >
> >         Al: Given that the syscalls are often followed by one another,
> >         why have them separated?
> >
> >         Al: If we are going to have this FD, then we should keep the
> >         FD around for the duration.  Closing it would get rid of
> >         everything.  Use FD to talk to filesystem driver throughout.
> >         Don't need a process to hang around.
> >
> >         Al: Note that unmount operates purely on the namespace.  You
> >         might still have open files on the unmounted filesystem, so
> >         the filesystem is still around.
> >
> >         Some discussion about getting the FD given a mounted filesystem.
> >         Interaction between FD and shutdown.
> >
> >         Al: But if FD is around, someone might remount filesystem.
> >         So some hair if using FD to wait for all files from the
> >         filesystem to be closed.
> >
> >         Mount over symlinks?
> >
> >         Al: Need to be careful here.  Last I looked, this would be
> >         extremely painful.  Easier to hide a directory with a symlink
> >         than vice versa.
> >
> >         Discussion of an openat() and security holes.
> >
> >         Ted: Can pass a directory FD across a UNIX-domain socket and
> >         then do openat(), so security issue already exists.  More
> >         fun with mountat().
> >
> >         Al: Completely insane, greatly increases attack surface.
> >
> >         Ted: FS fuzzers giving bugs are first-class bugs.  But cloud
> >         sysadmins might not like the attack surface.
> >
> >         Serge: Use fuse to mediate security.
> >
> 
> Here are my notes on features that I want, augmented some by the discussion:

Good additions!  Would you like to send your added notes to Jon Corbet?
He asked for notes for sessions that neither he nor Jake was able to
attend.

							Thanx, Paul

> Requirements:
> 
>  - Syscalls that just affects mount points
> 
>  - Mount by fd.
> 
>  - Overmounting / should be useful (e.g. return an fd,
> mount-and-chdir, etc.)  Currently, using mount(2) to mount on top of
> '/' is mostly useless, because there is no way to chdir to the new
> mount, to chroot to it, or to get an fd for it.
> 
>  - Cross-ns bind mount.  That is, I want to be able to mount a foreign
> fd into my namespace.  This doesn't really need a new API, but it
> would be a lot cleaner if we could use SCM_RIGHTS for this without
> mucking with /proc/self/fd.
> 
>  - Don't follow symlinks, at least optionally.  Al Viro says that
> mounting on top of certain types of objects might be impossible, but
> I'd like to extend the set of possible overmounts.
> 
>  - Clear separation of superblock flags and mount flags.  The
> read-only flag is somewhat special, but I think that it can be managed
> cleanly.
> 
>  - Explicit set/clear mount flags.  Setting the read-only bit
> shouldn't involve reading the old flags with a separate syscall.
> 
>  - Bind and set/clear flags at the same time.  (e.g. create a new
> read-only bind mount atomically.)
> 
>  - Leave room for unions.  I'm not sure what this entails.
> 
> 
> Here's a possible piece of a new API:
> 
> int mount_bind(int sourcefd, int destdfd, const char *destpath, int
> opflags, int clearflags, int setflags);
> 
> opflags include BINDMNT_CHDIR, AT_NOFOLLOW, etc.  The setflags are
> ored into the flags from the source, and the clearflags are cleared.
> Other flags are left unchanged.  if (setflags & clearflags), -EINVAL
> is returned.
> 
> 
> int mount_changebindflags(int dfd, const char *path, int opflags, int
> clearflags, int setflags);
> 
> 
> Al Viro mentioned that, for a new fs (as opposed to a bind mount), we
> want a control fd for a file system, on which we can send commands,
> close (i.e. superblock shutdown), and change flags.
> 
> --Andy
> 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread

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2014-08-24 16:59 ` [Ksummit-discuss] On the off-chance that my mount() notes are at all useful Andy Lutomirski
2014-08-25  2:55   ` Paul E. McKenney

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