freebsd-dev/sys/security/audit/audit_worker.c
Julian Elischer 3745c395ec Rename the kthread_xxx (e.g. kthread_create()) calls
to kproc_xxx as they actually make whole processes.
Thos makes way for us to add REAL kthread_create() and friends
that actually make theads. it turns out that most of these
calls actually end up being moved back to the thread version
when it's added. but we need to make this cosmetic change first.

I'd LOVE to do this rename in 7.0  so that we can eventually MFC the
new kthread_xxx() calls.
2007-10-20 23:23:23 +00:00

552 lines
17 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) 1999-2005 Apple Computer, Inc.
* Copyright (c) 2006 Robert N. M. Watson
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. Neither the name of Apple Computer, Inc. ("Apple") nor the names of
* its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
* from this software without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY APPLE AND ITS CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL APPLE OR ITS CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
* ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
* STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
* IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* $FreeBSD$
*/
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/condvar.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
#include <sys/file.h>
#include <sys/filedesc.h>
#include <sys/fcntl.h>
#include <sys/ipc.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/kthread.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/mount.h>
#include <sys/namei.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/socketvar.h>
#include <sys/protosw.h>
#include <sys/domain.h>
#include <sys/sysproto.h>
#include <sys/sysent.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/ucred.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
#include <sys/un.h>
#include <sys/unistd.h>
#include <sys/vnode.h>
#include <bsm/audit.h>
#include <bsm/audit_internal.h>
#include <bsm/audit_kevents.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <netinet/in_pcb.h>
#include <security/audit/audit.h>
#include <security/audit/audit_private.h>
#include <vm/uma.h>
/*
* Worker thread that will schedule disk I/O, etc.
*/
static struct proc *audit_thread;
/*
* When an audit log is rotated, the actual rotation must be performed by the
* audit worker thread, as it may have outstanding writes on the current
* audit log. audit_replacement_vp holds the vnode replacing the current
* vnode. We can't let more than one replacement occur at a time, so if more
* than one thread requests a replacement, only one can have the replacement
* "in progress" at any given moment. If a thread tries to replace the audit
* vnode and discovers a replacement is already in progress (i.e.,
* audit_replacement_flag != 0), then it will sleep on audit_replacement_cv
* waiting its turn to perform a replacement. When a replacement is
* completed, this cv is signalled by the worker thread so a waiting thread
* can start another replacement. We also store a credential to perform
* audit log write operations with.
*
* The current credential and vnode are thread-local to audit_worker.
*/
static struct cv audit_replacement_cv;
static int audit_replacement_flag;
static struct vnode *audit_replacement_vp;
static struct ucred *audit_replacement_cred;
/*
* Flags related to Kernel->user-space communication.
*/
static int audit_file_rotate_wait;
/*
* Write an audit record to a file, performed as the last stage after both
* preselection and BSM conversion. Both space management and write failures
* are handled in this function.
*
* No attempt is made to deal with possible failure to deliver a trigger to
* the audit daemon, since the message is asynchronous anyway.
*/
static void
audit_record_write(struct vnode *vp, struct ucred *cred, struct thread *td,
void *data, size_t len)
{
static struct timeval last_lowspace_trigger;
static struct timeval last_fail;
static int cur_lowspace_trigger;
struct statfs *mnt_stat;
int error, vfslocked;
static int cur_fail;
struct vattr vattr;
long temp;
if (vp == NULL)
return;
mnt_stat = &vp->v_mount->mnt_stat;
vfslocked = VFS_LOCK_GIANT(vp->v_mount);
/*
* First, gather statistics on the audit log file and file system so
* that we know how we're doing on space. Consider failure of these
* operations to indicate a future inability to write to the file.
*/
error = VFS_STATFS(vp->v_mount, mnt_stat, td);
if (error)
goto fail;
vn_lock(vp, LK_EXCLUSIVE | LK_RETRY, td);
error = VOP_GETATTR(vp, &vattr, cred, td);
VOP_UNLOCK(vp, 0, td);
if (error)
goto fail;
audit_fstat.af_currsz = vattr.va_size;
/*
* We handle four different space-related limits:
*
* - A fixed (hard) limit on the minimum free blocks we require on
* the file system, and results in record loss, a trigger, and
* possible fail stop due to violating invariants.
*
* - An administrative (soft) limit, which when fallen below, results
* in the kernel notifying the audit daemon of low space.
*
* - An audit trail size limit, which when gone above, results in the
* kernel notifying the audit daemon that rotation is desired.
*
* - The total depth of the kernel audit record exceeding free space,
* which can lead to possible fail stop (with drain), in order to
* prevent violating invariants. Failure here doesn't halt
* immediately, but prevents new records from being generated.
*
* Possibly, the last of these should be handled differently, always
* allowing a full queue to be lost, rather than trying to prevent
* loss.
*
* First, handle the hard limit, which generates a trigger and may
* fail stop. This is handled in the same manner as ENOSPC from
* VOP_WRITE, and results in record loss.
*/
if (mnt_stat->f_bfree < AUDIT_HARD_LIMIT_FREE_BLOCKS) {
error = ENOSPC;
goto fail_enospc;
}
/*
* Second, handle falling below the soft limit, if defined; we send
* the daemon a trigger and continue processing the record. Triggers
* are limited to 1/sec.
*/
if (audit_qctrl.aq_minfree != 0) {
/*
* XXXAUDIT: Check math and block size calculations here.
*/
temp = mnt_stat->f_blocks / (100 / audit_qctrl.aq_minfree);
if (mnt_stat->f_bfree < temp) {
if (ppsratecheck(&last_lowspace_trigger,
&cur_lowspace_trigger, 1)) {
(void)send_trigger(AUDIT_TRIGGER_LOW_SPACE);
printf("Warning: audit space low\n");
}
}
}
/*
* If the current file is getting full, generate a rotation trigger
* to the daemon. This is only approximate, which is fine as more
* records may be generated before the daemon rotates the file.
*/
if ((audit_fstat.af_filesz != 0) && (audit_file_rotate_wait == 0) &&
(vattr.va_size >= audit_fstat.af_filesz)) {
audit_file_rotate_wait = 1;
(void)send_trigger(AUDIT_TRIGGER_ROTATE_KERNEL);
}
/*
* If the estimated amount of audit data in the audit event queue
* (plus records allocated but not yet queued) has reached the amount
* of free space on the disk, then we need to go into an audit fail
* stop state, in which we do not permit the allocation/committing of
* any new audit records. We continue to process records but don't
* allow any activities that might generate new records. In the
* future, we might want to detect when space is available again and
* allow operation to continue, but this behavior is sufficient to
* meet fail stop requirements in CAPP.
*/
if (audit_fail_stop) {
if ((unsigned long)((audit_q_len + audit_pre_q_len + 1) *
MAX_AUDIT_RECORD_SIZE) / mnt_stat->f_bsize >=
(unsigned long)(mnt_stat->f_bfree)) {
if (ppsratecheck(&last_fail, &cur_fail, 1))
printf("audit_record_write: free space "
"below size of audit queue, failing "
"stop\n");
audit_in_failure = 1;
} else if (audit_in_failure) {
/*
* Note: if we want to handle recovery, this is the
* spot to do it: unset audit_in_failure, and issue a
* wakeup on the cv.
*/
}
}
error = vn_rdwr(UIO_WRITE, vp, data, len, (off_t)0, UIO_SYSSPACE,
IO_APPEND|IO_UNIT, cred, NULL, NULL, td);
if (error == ENOSPC)
goto fail_enospc;
else if (error)
goto fail;
/*
* Catch completion of a queue drain here; if we're draining and the
* queue is now empty, fail stop. That audit_fail_stop is implicitly
* true, since audit_in_failure can only be set of audit_fail_stop is
* set.
*
* Note: if we handle recovery from audit_in_failure, then we need to
* make panic here conditional.
*/
if (audit_in_failure) {
if (audit_q_len == 0 && audit_pre_q_len == 0) {
VOP_LOCK(vp, LK_DRAIN | LK_INTERLOCK, td);
(void)VOP_FSYNC(vp, MNT_WAIT, td);
VOP_UNLOCK(vp, 0, td);
panic("Audit store overflow; record queue drained.");
}
}
VFS_UNLOCK_GIANT(vfslocked);
return;
fail_enospc:
/*
* ENOSPC is considered a special case with respect to failures, as
* this can reflect either our preemptive detection of insufficient
* space, or ENOSPC returned by the vnode write call.
*/
if (audit_fail_stop) {
VOP_LOCK(vp, LK_DRAIN | LK_INTERLOCK, td);
(void)VOP_FSYNC(vp, MNT_WAIT, td);
VOP_UNLOCK(vp, 0, td);
panic("Audit log space exhausted and fail-stop set.");
}
(void)send_trigger(AUDIT_TRIGGER_NO_SPACE);
audit_suspended = 1;
/* FALLTHROUGH */
fail:
/*
* We have failed to write to the file, so the current record is
* lost, which may require an immediate system halt.
*/
if (audit_panic_on_write_fail) {
VOP_LOCK(vp, LK_DRAIN | LK_INTERLOCK, td);
(void)VOP_FSYNC(vp, MNT_WAIT, td);
VOP_UNLOCK(vp, 0, td);
panic("audit_worker: write error %d\n", error);
} else if (ppsratecheck(&last_fail, &cur_fail, 1))
printf("audit_worker: write error %d\n", error);
VFS_UNLOCK_GIANT(vfslocked);
}
/*
* If an appropriate signal has been received rotate the audit log based on
* the global replacement variables. Signal consumers as needed that the
* rotation has taken place.
*
* The global variables and CVs used to signal the audit_worker to perform a
* rotation are essentially a message queue of depth 1. It would be much
* nicer to actually use a message queue.
*/
static void
audit_worker_rotate(struct ucred **audit_credp, struct vnode **audit_vpp,
struct thread *audit_td)
{
int do_replacement_signal, vfslocked;
struct ucred *old_cred;
struct vnode *old_vp;
mtx_assert(&audit_mtx, MA_OWNED);
do_replacement_signal = 0;
while (audit_replacement_flag != 0) {
old_cred = *audit_credp;
old_vp = *audit_vpp;
*audit_credp = audit_replacement_cred;
*audit_vpp = audit_replacement_vp;
audit_replacement_cred = NULL;
audit_replacement_vp = NULL;
audit_replacement_flag = 0;
audit_enabled = (*audit_vpp != NULL);
if (old_vp != NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
vfslocked = VFS_LOCK_GIANT(old_vp->v_mount);
vn_close(old_vp, AUDIT_CLOSE_FLAGS, old_cred,
audit_td);
VFS_UNLOCK_GIANT(vfslocked);
crfree(old_cred);
mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
old_cred = NULL;
old_vp = NULL;
}
do_replacement_signal = 1;
}
/*
* Signal that replacement have occurred to wake up and start any
* other replacements started in parallel. We can continue about our
* business in the mean time. We broadcast so that both new
* replacements can be inserted, but also so that the source(s) of
* replacement can return successfully.
*/
if (do_replacement_signal)
cv_broadcast(&audit_replacement_cv);
}
/*
* Given a kernel audit record, process as required. Kernel audit records
* are converted to one, or possibly two, BSM records, depending on whether
* there is a user audit record present also. Kernel records need be
* converted to BSM before they can be written out. Both types will be
* written to disk, and audit pipes.
*/
static void
audit_worker_process_record(struct vnode *audit_vp, struct ucred *audit_cred,
struct thread *audit_td, struct kaudit_record *ar)
{
struct au_record *bsm;
au_class_t class;
au_event_t event;
au_id_t auid;
int error, sorf;
/*
* First, handle the user record, if any: commit to the system trail
* and audit pipes as selected.
*/
if ((ar->k_ar_commit & AR_COMMIT_USER) &&
(ar->k_ar_commit & AR_PRESELECT_USER_TRAIL))
audit_record_write(audit_vp, audit_cred, audit_td,
ar->k_udata, ar->k_ulen);
if ((ar->k_ar_commit & AR_COMMIT_USER) &&
(ar->k_ar_commit & AR_PRESELECT_USER_PIPE))
audit_pipe_submit_user(ar->k_udata, ar->k_ulen);
if (!(ar->k_ar_commit & AR_COMMIT_KERNEL) ||
((ar->k_ar_commit & AR_PRESELECT_PIPE) == 0 &&
(ar->k_ar_commit & AR_PRESELECT_TRAIL) == 0))
return;
auid = ar->k_ar.ar_subj_auid;
event = ar->k_ar.ar_event;
class = au_event_class(event);
if (ar->k_ar.ar_errno == 0)
sorf = AU_PRS_SUCCESS;
else
sorf = AU_PRS_FAILURE;
error = kaudit_to_bsm(ar, &bsm);
switch (error) {
case BSM_NOAUDIT:
return;
case BSM_FAILURE:
printf("audit_worker_process_record: BSM_FAILURE\n");
return;
case BSM_SUCCESS:
break;
default:
panic("kaudit_to_bsm returned %d", error);
}
if (ar->k_ar_commit & AR_PRESELECT_TRAIL)
audit_record_write(audit_vp, audit_cred, audit_td, bsm->data,
bsm->len);
if (ar->k_ar_commit & AR_PRESELECT_PIPE)
audit_pipe_submit(auid, event, class, sorf,
ar->k_ar_commit & AR_PRESELECT_TRAIL, bsm->data,
bsm->len);
kau_free(bsm);
}
/*
* The audit_worker thread is responsible for watching the event queue,
* dequeueing records, converting them to BSM format, and committing them to
* disk. In order to minimize lock thrashing, records are dequeued in sets
* to a thread-local work queue. In addition, the audit_work performs the
* actual exchange of audit log vnode pointer, as audit_vp is a thread-local
* variable.
*/
static void
audit_worker(void *arg)
{
struct kaudit_queue ar_worklist;
struct kaudit_record *ar;
struct ucred *audit_cred;
struct thread *audit_td;
struct vnode *audit_vp;
int lowater_signal;
/*
* These are thread-local variables requiring no synchronization.
*/
TAILQ_INIT(&ar_worklist);
audit_cred = NULL;
audit_td = curthread;
audit_vp = NULL;
mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
while (1) {
mtx_assert(&audit_mtx, MA_OWNED);
/*
* Wait for record or rotation events.
*/
while (!audit_replacement_flag && TAILQ_EMPTY(&audit_q))
cv_wait(&audit_worker_cv, &audit_mtx);
/*
* First priority: replace the audit log target if requested.
*/
audit_worker_rotate(&audit_cred, &audit_vp, audit_td);
/*
* If there are records in the global audit record queue,
* transfer them to a thread-local queue and process them
* one by one. If we cross the low watermark threshold,
* signal any waiting processes that they may wake up and
* continue generating records.
*/
lowater_signal = 0;
while ((ar = TAILQ_FIRST(&audit_q))) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&audit_q, ar, k_q);
audit_q_len--;
if (audit_q_len == audit_qctrl.aq_lowater)
lowater_signal++;
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&ar_worklist, ar, k_q);
}
if (lowater_signal)
cv_broadcast(&audit_watermark_cv);
mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
while ((ar = TAILQ_FIRST(&ar_worklist))) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&ar_worklist, ar, k_q);
audit_worker_process_record(audit_vp, audit_cred,
audit_td, ar);
audit_free(ar);
}
mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
}
}
/*
* audit_rotate_vnode() is called by a user or kernel thread to configure or
* de-configure auditing on a vnode. The arguments are the replacement
* credential and vnode to substitute for the current credential and vnode,
* if any. If either is set to NULL, both should be NULL, and this is used
* to indicate that audit is being disabled. The real work is done in the
* audit_worker thread, but audit_rotate_vnode() waits synchronously for that
* to complete.
*
* The vnode should be referenced and opened by the caller. The credential
* should be referenced. audit_rotate_vnode() will own both references as of
* this call, so the caller should not release either.
*
* XXXAUDIT: Review synchronize communication logic. Really, this is a
* message queue of depth 1. We are essentially acquiring ownership of the
* communications queue, inserting our message, and waiting for an
* acknowledgement.
*/
void
audit_rotate_vnode(struct ucred *cred, struct vnode *vp)
{
/*
* If other parallel log replacements have been requested, we wait
* until they've finished before continuing.
*/
mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
while (audit_replacement_flag != 0)
cv_wait(&audit_replacement_cv, &audit_mtx);
audit_replacement_cred = cred;
audit_replacement_flag = 1;
audit_replacement_vp = vp;
/*
* Wake up the audit worker to perform the exchange once we release
* the mutex.
*/
cv_signal(&audit_worker_cv);
/*
* Wait for the audit_worker to broadcast that a replacement has
* taken place; we know that once this has happened, our vnode has
* been replaced in, so we can return successfully.
*/
cv_wait(&audit_replacement_cv, &audit_mtx);
audit_file_rotate_wait = 0; /* We can now request another rotation */
mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
}
void
audit_worker_init(void)
{
int error;
cv_init(&audit_replacement_cv, "audit_replacement_cv");
error = kproc_create(audit_worker, NULL, &audit_thread, RFHIGHPID,
0, "audit");
if (error)
panic("audit_worker_init: kproc_create returned %d", error);
}