// Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be // found in the LICENSE file. #ifndef SANDBOX_POLICY_LINUX_SANDBOX_LINUX_H_ #define SANDBOX_POLICY_LINUX_SANDBOX_LINUX_H_ #include #include #include #include "base/check_op.h" #include "base/macros.h" #include "base/posix/global_descriptors.h" #include "sandbox/linux/syscall_broker/broker_command.h" #include "sandbox/linux/syscall_broker/broker_file_permission.h" #include "sandbox/policy/export.h" #include "sandbox/policy/linux/sandbox_seccomp_bpf_linux.h" #include "sandbox/policy/sandbox_type.h" #include "sandbox/policy/sanitizer_buildflags.h" #if BUILDFLAG(USING_SANITIZER) #include #endif namespace base { template struct DefaultSingletonTraits; class Thread; } // namespace base namespace sandbox { namespace syscall_broker { class BrokerProcess; } // namespace syscall_broker class SetuidSandboxClient; } // namespace sandbox namespace sandbox { namespace policy { // A singleton class to represent and change our sandboxing state for the // three main Linux sandboxes. // The sandboxing model allows using two layers of sandboxing. The first layer // can be implemented either with unprivileged namespaces or with the setuid // sandbox. This class provides a way to engage the namespace sandbox, but does // not deal with the legacy setuid sandbox directly. // The second layer is mainly based on seccomp-bpf and is engaged with // InitializeSandbox(). InitializeSandbox() is also responsible for "sealing" // the first layer of sandboxing. That is, InitializeSandbox must always be // called to have any meaningful sandboxing at all. class SANDBOX_POLICY_EXPORT SandboxLinux { public: // This is a list of sandbox IPC methods which the renderer may send to the // sandbox host. See // https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/linux/sandbox_ipc.md // This isn't the full list, values < 32 are reserved for methods called from // Skia, and values < 64 are reserved for libc_interceptor.cc. enum LinuxSandboxIPCMethods { DEPRECATED_METHOD_GET_FALLBACK_FONT_FOR_CHAR = 64, DEPRECATED_METHOD_GET_CHILD_WITH_INODE, DEPRECATED_METHOD_GET_STYLE_FOR_STRIKE, METHOD_MAKE_SHARED_MEMORY_SEGMENT, DEPRECATED_METHOD_MATCH_WITH_FALLBACK, }; // These form a bitmask which describes the conditions of the Linux sandbox. // Note: this doesn't strictly give you the current status, it states // what will be enabled when the relevant processes are initialized. enum Status { // SUID sandbox active. kSUID = 1 << 0, // Sandbox is using a new PID namespace. kPIDNS = 1 << 1, // Sandbox is using a new network namespace. kNetNS = 1 << 2, // seccomp-bpf sandbox active. kSeccompBPF = 1 << 3, // The Yama LSM module is present and enforcing. kYama = 1 << 4, // seccomp-bpf sandbox is active and the kernel supports TSYNC. kSeccompTSYNC = 1 << 5, // User namespace sandbox active. kUserNS = 1 << 6, // A flag that denotes an invalid sandbox status. kInvalid = 1 << 31, }; // SandboxLinux Options are a superset of SandboxSecompBPF Options. struct Options : public SandboxSeccompBPF::Options { // When running with a zygote, the namespace sandbox will have already // been engaged prior to initializing SandboxLinux itself, and need not // be done so again. Set to true to indicate that there isn't a zygote // for this process and the step is to be performed here explicitly. bool engage_namespace_sandbox = false; // Allow starting the sandbox with multiple threads already running. This // will enable TSYNC for seccomp-BPF, which syncs the seccomp-BPF policy // across all running threads. bool allow_threads_during_sandbox_init = false; // Enables the CHECK for open directories. The open directory check is only // useful for the chroot jail (from the semantic layer of the sandbox), and // can safely be disabled if we are only enabling the seccomp-BPF layer. bool check_for_open_directories = true; }; // Callers can provide this hook to run code right before the policy // is passed to the BPF compiler and the sandbox is engaged. If // pre_sandbox_hook() returns true, the sandbox will be engaged // afterwards, otherwise the process is terminated. using PreSandboxHook = base::OnceCallback; // Get our singleton instance. static SandboxLinux* GetInstance(); // Do some initialization that can only be done before any of the sandboxes // are enabled. If using the setuid sandbox, this should be called manually // before the setuid sandbox is engaged. // Security: When this runs, it is imperative that either InitializeSandbox() // runs as well or that all file descriptors returned in // GetFileDescriptorsToClose() get closed. // Otherwise file descriptors that bypass the security of the setuid sandbox // would be kept open. One must be particularly careful if a process performs // a fork(). bool PreinitializeSandbox(); // Check that the current process is the init process of a new PID // namespace and then proceed to drop access to the file system by using // a new unprivileged namespace. This is a layer-1 sandbox. // In order for this sandbox to be effective, it must be "sealed" by calling // InitializeSandbox(). // Terminates the process in case the sandboxing operations cannot complete // successfully. void EngageNamespaceSandbox(bool from_zygote); // Performs the same actions as EngageNamespaceSandbox, but is allowed to // to fail. This is useful when sandboxed non-renderer processes could // benefit from extra sandboxing but is not strictly required on systems that // don't support unprivileged user namespaces. // Zygote should use EngageNamespaceSandbox instead. bool EngageNamespaceSandboxIfPossible(); // Return a list of file descriptors to close if PreinitializeSandbox() ran // but InitializeSandbox() won't. Avoid using. // TODO(jln): get rid of this hack. std::vector GetFileDescriptorsToClose(); // Seal an eventual layer-1 sandbox and initialize the layer-2 sandbox with // an adequate policy depending on the process type and command line // arguments. // Currently the layer-2 sandbox is composed of seccomp-bpf and address space // limitations. // This function should only be called without any thread running. bool InitializeSandbox(SandboxType sandbox_type, PreSandboxHook hook, const Options& options); // Stop |thread| in a way that can be trusted by the sandbox. void StopThread(base::Thread* thread); // Returns the status of the renderer, worker and ppapi sandbox. Can only // be queried after going through PreinitializeSandbox(). This is a bitmask // and uses the constants defined in "enum Status" above. Since the // status needs to be provided before the sandboxes are actually started, // this returns what will actually happen once InitializeSandbox() // is called from inside these processes. int GetStatus(); // Returns true if the current process is single-threaded or if the number // of threads cannot be determined. bool IsSingleThreaded() const; // Returns true if we started Seccomp BPF. bool seccomp_bpf_started() const; // Simple accessor for our instance of the setuid sandbox. Will never return // NULL. // There is no StartSetuidSandbox(), the SetuidSandboxClient instance should // be used directly. SetuidSandboxClient* setuid_sandbox_client() const; // Check the policy and eventually start the seccomp-bpf sandbox. Fine to be // called with threads, as long as // |options.allow_threads_during_sandbox_init| is true and the kernel // supports seccomp's TSYNC feature. If TSYNC is not available we treat // multiple threads as a fatal error. bool StartSeccompBPF(SandboxType sandbox_type, PreSandboxHook hook, const Options& options); // Limit the address space of the current process (and its children) to make // some vulnerabilities harder to exploit. Writes the errno due to setrlimit // (including 0 if no error) into |error|. bool LimitAddressSpace(int* error); // Returns a file descriptor to proc. The file descriptor is no longer valid // after the sandbox has been sealed. int proc_fd() const { DCHECK_NE(-1, proc_fd_); return proc_fd_; } #if BUILDFLAG(USING_SANITIZER) __sanitizer_sandbox_arguments* sanitizer_args() const { return sanitizer_args_.get(); } #endif // A BrokerProcess is a helper that is started before the sandbox is engaged, // typically from a pre-sandbox hook, that will serve requests to access // files over an IPC channel. The client of this runs from a SIGSYS handler // triggered by the seccomp-bpf sandbox. // |client_sandbox_policy| is the policy being run by the client, and is // used to derive the equivalent broker-side policy. // |broker_side_hook| is an alternate pre-sandbox hook to be run before the // broker itself gets sandboxed, to which the broker side policy and // |options| are passed. // Crashes the process if the broker can not be started since continuation // is impossible (and presumably unsafe). // This should never be destroyed, as after the sandbox is started it is // vital to the process. void StartBrokerProcess( const syscall_broker::BrokerCommandSet& allowed_command_set, std::vector permissions, PreSandboxHook broker_side_hook, const Options& options); // Returns true if the broker should handle a particular syscall indicated by // |sysno|. This will typically return true for system calls that take // filepaths as arguments. bool ShouldBrokerHandleSyscall(int sysno) const; // Returns an expression that indicates the syscall in question should be // handled transparently by the broker process. This is useful for file // syscalls that take pathnames, so we can enforce pathname whitelisting. // Only usable if StartBrokerProcess() was already called. bpf_dsl::ResultExpr HandleViaBroker() const; private: friend struct base::DefaultSingletonTraits; SandboxLinux(); ~SandboxLinux(); // We must have been pre_initialized_ before using these. bool seccomp_bpf_supported() const; bool seccomp_bpf_with_tsync_supported() const; // Returns true if it can be determined that the current process has open // directories that are not managed by the SandboxLinux class. This would // be a vulnerability as it would allow to bypass the setuid sandbox. bool HasOpenDirectories() const; // The last part of the initialization is to make sure any temporary "hole" // in the sandbox is closed. For now, this consists of closing proc_fd_. void SealSandbox(); // GetStatus() makes promises as to how the sandbox will behave. This // checks that no promises have been broken. void CheckForBrokenPromises(SandboxType sandbox_type); // Stop |thread| and make sure it does not appear in /proc/self/tasks/ // anymore. void StopThreadAndEnsureNotCounted(base::Thread* thread) const; // Engages the namespace sandbox as described for EngageNamespaceSandbox. // Returns false if it fails to transition to a new user namespace, but // after transitioning to a new user namespace we don't allow this function // to fail. bool EngageNamespaceSandboxInternal(bool from_zygote); // A file descriptor to /proc. It's dangerous to have it around as it could // allow for sandbox bypasses. It needs to be closed before we consider // ourselves sandboxed. int proc_fd_; bool seccomp_bpf_started_; // The value returned by GetStatus(). Gets computed once and then cached. int sandbox_status_flags_; // Did PreinitializeSandbox() run? bool pre_initialized_; bool seccomp_bpf_supported_; // Accurate if pre_initialized_. bool seccomp_bpf_with_tsync_supported_; // Accurate if pre_initialized_. bool yama_is_enforcing_; // Accurate if pre_initialized_. bool initialize_sandbox_ran_; // InitializeSandbox() was called. std::unique_ptr setuid_sandbox_client_; #if BUILDFLAG(USING_SANITIZER) std::unique_ptr<__sanitizer_sandbox_arguments> sanitizer_args_; #endif syscall_broker::BrokerProcess* broker_process_; // Leaked as global. DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(SandboxLinux); }; } // namespace policy } // namespace sandbox #endif // SANDBOX_POLICY_LINUX_SANDBOX_LINUX_H_