Commit Graph

131 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Watson
a959b1f02c Add missing DTrace probe invocation to mac_vnode_check_open; the probe
was declared, but never used.

MFC after:	3 days
Sponsored by:	Google, Inc.
2010-10-23 16:59:39 +00:00
Robert Watson
fa76567150 Rename MAC Framework-internal macros used to invoke policy entry points:
MAC_BOOLEAN           -> MAC_POLICY_BOOLEAN
  MAC_BOOLEAN_NOSLEEP   -> MAC_POLICY_BOOLEANN_NOSLEEP
  MAC_CHECK             -> MAC_POLICY_CHECK
  MAC_CHECK_NOSLEEP     -> MAC_POLICY_CHECK_NOSLEEP
  MAC_EXTERNALIZE       -> MAC_POLICY_EXTERNALIZE
  MAC_GRANT             -> MAC_POLICY_GRANT
  MAC_GRANT_NOSLEEP     -> MAC_POLICY_GRANT_NOSLEEP
  MAC_INTERNALIZE       -> MAC_POLICY_INTERNALIZE
  MAC_PERFORM           -> MAC_POLICY_PERFORM_CHECK
  MAC_PERFORM_NOSLEEP   -> MAC_POLICY_PERFORM_NOSLEEP

This frees up those macro names for use in wrapping calls into the MAC
Framework from the remainder of the kernel.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2009-05-01 21:05:40 +00:00
Robert Watson
4020272933 Rework MAC Framework synchronization in a number of ways in order to
improve performance:

- Eliminate custom reference count and condition variable to monitor
  threads entering the framework, as this had both significant overhead
  and behaved badly in the face of contention.

- Replace reference count with two locks: an rwlock and an sx lock,
  which will be read-acquired by threads entering the framework
  depending on whether a give policy entry point is permitted to sleep
  or not.

- Replace previous mutex locking of the reference count for exclusive
  access with write acquiring of both the policy list sx and rw locks,
  which occurs only when policies are attached or detached.

- Do a lockless read of the dynamic policy list head before acquiring
  any locks in order to reduce overhead when no dynamic policies are
  loaded; this a race we can afford to lose.

- For every policy entry point invocation, decide whether sleeping is
  permitted, and if not, use a _NOSLEEP() variant of the composition
  macros, which will use the rwlock instead of the sxlock.  In some
  cases, we decide which to use based on allocation flags passed to the
  MAC Framework entry point.

As with the move to rwlocks/rmlocks in pfil, this may trigger witness
warnings, but these should (generally) be false positives as all
acquisition of the locks is for read with two very narrow exceptions
for policy load/unload, and those code blocks should never acquire
other locks.

Sponsored by:	Google, Inc.
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Discussed with:	csjp (idea, not specific patch)
2009-03-14 16:06:06 +00:00
Robert Watson
fefd0ac8a9 Remove 'uio' argument from MAC Framework and MAC policy entry points for
extended attribute get/set; in the case of get an uninitialized user
buffer was passed before the EA was retrieved, making it of relatively
little use; the latter was simply unused by any policies.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	Google, Inc.
2009-03-08 12:32:06 +00:00
Robert Watson
2087a58ca2 Add static DTrace probes for MAC Framework access control checks and
privilege grants so that dtrace can be more easily used to monitor
the security decisions being generated by the MAC Framework following
policy invocation.

Successful access control checks will be reported by:

  mac_framework:kernel:<entrypoint>:mac_check_ok

Failed access control checks will be reported by:

  mac_framework:kernel:<entrypoint>:mac_check_err

Successful privilege grants will be reported by:

  mac_framework:kernel:priv_grant:mac_grant_ok

Failed privilege grants will be reported by:

  mac_framework:kernel:priv_grant:mac_grant_err

In all cases, the return value (always 0 for _ok, otherwise an errno
for _err) will be reported via arg0 on the probe, and subsequent
arguments will hold entrypoint-specific data, in a style similar to
privilege tracing.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	Google, Inc.
2009-03-08 00:50:37 +00:00
Edward Tomasz Napierala
15bc6b2bd8 Introduce accmode_t. This is required for NFSv4 ACLs - it will be neccessary
to add more V* constants, and the variables changed by this patch were often
being assigned to mode_t variables, which is 16 bit.

Approved by:	rwatson (mentor)
2008-10-28 13:44:11 +00:00
Robert Watson
6356dba0b4 Introduce two related changes to the TrustedBSD MAC Framework:
(1) Abstract interpreter vnode labeling in execve(2) and mac_execve(2)
    so that the general exec code isn't aware of the details of
    allocating, copying, and freeing labels, rather, simply passes in
    a void pointer to start and stop functions that will be used by
    the framework.  This change will be MFC'd.

(2) Introduce a new flags field to the MAC_POLICY_SET(9) interface
    allowing policies to declare which types of objects require label
    allocation, initialization, and destruction, and define a set of
    flags covering various supported object types (MPC_OBJECT_PROC,
    MPC_OBJECT_VNODE, MPC_OBJECT_INPCB, ...).  This change reduces the
    overhead of compiling the MAC Framework into the kernel if policies
    aren't loaded, or if policies require labels on only a small number
    or even no object types.  Each time a policy is loaded or unloaded,
    we recalculate a mask of labeled object types across all policies
    present in the system.  Eliminate MAC_ALWAYS_LABEL_MBUF option as it
    is no longer required.

MFC after:	1 week ((1) only)
Reviewed by:	csjp
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	Apple, Inc.
2008-08-23 15:26:36 +00:00
Robert Watson
eb2cd5e1df Rename mac_associate_nfsd_label() to mac_proc_associate_nfsd(), and move
from mac_vfs.c to mac_process.c to join other functions that setup up
process labels for specific purposes.  Unlike the two proc create calls,
this call is intended to run after creation when a process registers as
the NFS daemon, so remains an _associate_ call..

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2007-10-25 12:34:14 +00:00
Robert Watson
a7f3aac7cb Further MAC Framework cleanup: normalize some local variable names and
clean up some comments.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2007-10-25 07:49:47 +00:00
Robert Watson
30d239bc4c Merge first in a series of TrustedBSD MAC Framework KPI changes
from Mac OS X Leopard--rationalize naming for entry points to
the following general forms:

  mac_<object>_<method/action>
  mac_<object>_check_<method/action>

The previous naming scheme was inconsistent and mostly
reversed from the new scheme.  Also, make object types more
consistent and remove spaces from object types that contain
multiple parts ("posix_sem" -> "posixsem") to make mechanical
parsing easier.  Introduce a new "netinet" object type for
certain IPv4/IPv6-related methods.  Also simplify, slightly,
some entry point names.

All MAC policy modules will need to be recompiled, and modules
not updates as part of this commit will need to be modified to
conform to the new KPI.

Sponsored by:	SPARTA (original patches against Mac OS X)
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project, Apple Computer
2007-10-24 19:04:04 +00:00
Robert Watson
45e0f3d63d Rename mac_check_vnode_delete() MAC Framework and MAC Policy entry
point to mac_check_vnode_unlink(), reflecting UNIX naming conventions.

This is the first of several commits to synchronize the MAC Framework
in FreeBSD 7.0 with the MAC Framework as it will appear in Mac OS X
Leopard.

Reveiwed by:    csjp, Samy Bahra <sbahra at gwu dot edu>
Submitted by:   Jacques Vidrine <nectar at apple dot com>
Obtained from:  Apple Computer, Inc.
Sponsored by:   SPARTA, SPAWAR
Approved by:    re (bmah)
2007-09-10 00:00:18 +00:00
Robert Watson
305759909e Rename mac*devfsdirent*() to mac*devfs*() to synchronize with SEDarwin,
where similar data structures exist to support devfs and the MAC
Framework, but are named differently.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	SPARTA, Inc.
2007-04-23 13:36:54 +00:00
Robert Watson
eb542415c0 In the MAC Framework implementation, file systems have two per-mountpoint
labels: the mount label (label of the mountpoint) and the fs label (label
of the file system).  In practice, policies appear to only ever use one,
and the distinction is not helpful.

Combine mnt_mntlabel and mnt_fslabel into a single mnt_label, and
eliminate extra machinery required to maintain the additional label.
Update policies to reflect removal of extra entry points and label.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	SPARTA, Inc.
2007-04-22 16:18:10 +00:00
Robert Watson
c96ae1968a Continue 7-CURRENT MAC Framework rearrangement and cleanup:
Don't perform a nested include of _label.h in mac.h, as mac.h now
describes only  the user API to MAC, and _label.h defines the in-kernel
representation of MAC labels.

Remove mac.h includes from policies and MAC framework components that do
not use userspace MAC API definitions.

Add _KERNEL inclusion checks to mac_internal.h and mac_policy.h, as these
are kernel-only include files

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2007-02-06 10:59:23 +00:00
Robert Watson
bd8a9c45aa Remove XXX comments about EA transaction support and provide a more
general and detailed comment on the topic of EA transactions and kernel
warnings.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2006-12-28 22:02:59 +00:00
Robert Watson
0efd6615cd Move src/sys/sys/mac_policy.h, the kernel interface between the MAC
Framework and security modules, to src/sys/security/mac/mac_policy.h,
completing the removal of kernel-only MAC Framework include files from
src/sys/sys.  Update the MAC Framework and MAC policy modules.  Delete
the old mac_policy.h.

Third party policy modules will need similar updating.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2006-12-22 23:34:47 +00:00
Robert Watson
e66fe0e1db Remove mac_enforce_subsystem debugging sysctls. Enforcement on
subsystems will be a property of policy modules, which may require
access control check entry points to be invoked even when not actively
enforcing (i.e., to track information flow without providing
protection).

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Suggested by:	Christopher dot Vance at sparta dot com
2006-12-21 09:51:34 +00:00
Robert Watson
19d0ec0330 Trim trailing white space, clean up comment line wrapping and formatting.
Document mac_associate_nfsd_label().

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2006-12-20 23:18:17 +00:00
Robert Watson
aed5570872 Complete break-out of sys/sys/mac.h into sys/security/mac/mac_framework.h
begun with a repo-copy of mac.h to mac_framework.h.  sys/mac.h now
contains the userspace and user<->kernel API and definitions, with all
in-kernel interfaces moved to mac_framework.h, which is now included
across most of the kernel instead.

This change is the first step in a larger cleanup and sweep of MAC
Framework interfaces in the kernel, and will not be MFC'd.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	SPARTA
2006-10-22 11:52:19 +00:00
Robert Watson
738f14d4b1 Remove MAC_DEBUG label counters, which were used to debug leaks and
other problems while labels were first being added to various kernel
objects.  They have outlived their usefulness.

MFC after:	1 month
Suggested by:	Christopher dot Vance at SPARTA dot com
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2006-09-20 13:33:41 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
9c499ad92f Remove the NDEVFSINO and NDEVFSOVERFLOW options which no longer exists in
DEVFS.

Remove the opt_devfs.h file now that it is empty.
2006-07-17 09:07:02 +00:00
Christian S.J. Peron
7935d5382b Introduce a new MAC entry point for label initialization of the NFS daemon's
credential: mac_associate_nfsd_label()

This entry point can be utilized by various Mandatory Access Control policies
so they can properly initialize the label of files which get created
as a result of an NFS operation. This work will be useful for fixing kernel
panics associated with accessing un-initialized or invalid vnode labels.

The implementation of these entry points will come shortly.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD
Requested by:	mdodd
MFC after:	3 weeks
2006-04-06 23:33:11 +00:00
Robert Watson
223aaaecb0 Remove mac_create_root_mount() and mpo_create_root_mount(), which
provided access to the root file system before the start of the
init process.  This was used briefly by SEBSD before it knew about
preloading data in the loader, and using that method to gain
access to data earlier results in fewer inconsistencies in the
approach.  Policy modules still have access to the root file system
creation event through the mac_create_mount() entry point.

Removed now, and will be removed from RELENG_6, in order to gain
third party policy dependencies on the entry point for the lifetime
of the 6.x branch.

MFC after:	3 days
Submitted by:	Chris Vance <Christopher dot Vance at SPARTA dot com>
Sponsored by:	SPARTA
2005-09-19 13:59:57 +00:00
Robert Watson
d26dd2d99e When devfs cloning takes place, provide access to the credential of the
process that caused the clone event to take place for the device driver
creating the device.  This allows cloned device drivers to adapt the
device node based on security aspects of the process, such as the uid,
gid, and MAC label.

- Add a cred reference to struct cdev, so that when a device node is
  instantiated as a vnode, the cloning credential can be exposed to
  MAC.

- Add make_dev_cred(), a version of make_dev() that additionally
  accepts the credential to stick in the struct cdev.  Implement it and
  make_dev() in terms of a back-end make_dev_credv().

- Add a new event handler, dev_clone_cred, which can be registered to
  receive the credential instead of dev_clone, if desired.

- Modify the MAC entry point mac_create_devfs_device() to accept an
  optional credential pointer (may be NULL), so that MAC policies can
  inspect and act on the label or other elements of the credential
  when initializing the skeleton device protections.

- Modify tty_pty.c to register clone_dev_cred and invoke make_dev_cred(),
  so that the pty clone credential is exposed to the MAC Framework.

While currently primarily focussed on MAC policies, this change is also
a prerequisite for changes to allow ptys to be instantiated with the UID
of the process looking up the pty.  This requires further changes to the
pty driver -- in particular, to immediately recycle pty nodes on last
close so that the credential-related state can be recreated on next
lookup.

Submitted by:	Andrew Reisse <andrew.reisse@sparta.com>
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	SPAWAR, SPARTA
MFC after:	1 week
MFC note:	Merge to 6.x, but not 5.x for ABI reasons
2005-07-14 10:22:09 +00:00
Christian S.J. Peron
c92163dcad Move MAC check_vnode_mmap entry point out from being exclusive to
MAP_SHARED so that the entry point gets executed un-conditionally.
This may be useful for security policies which want to perform access
control checks around run-time linking.

-add the mmap(2) flags argument to the check_vnode_mmap entry point
 so that we can make access control decisions based on the type of
 mapped object.
-update any dependent API around this parameter addition such as
 function prototype modifications, entry point parameter additions
 and the inclusion of sys/mman.h header file.
-Change the MLS, BIBA and LOMAC security policies so that subject
 domination routines are not executed unless the type of mapping is
 shared. This is done to maintain compatibility between the old
 vm_mmap_vnode(9) and these policies.

Reviewed by:	rwatson
MFC after:	1 month
2005-04-14 16:03:30 +00:00
Robert Watson
69f832b45c Update copyright for NETA->McAfee. 2005-01-30 12:38:47 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
89c9c53da0 Do the dreaded s/dev_t/struct cdev */
Bump __FreeBSD_version accordingly.
2004-06-16 09:47:26 +00:00
Robert Watson
f6a4109212 Update my personal copyrights and NETA copyrights in the kernel
to use the "year1-year3" format, as opposed to "year1, year2, year3".
This seems to make lawyers more happy, but also prevents the
lines from getting excessively long as the years start to add up.

Suggested by:	imp
2004-02-22 00:33:12 +00:00
Robert Watson
eca8a663d4 Modify the MAC Framework so that instead of embedding a (struct label)
in various kernel objects to represent security data, we embed a
(struct label *) pointer, which now references labels allocated using
a UMA zone (mac_label.c).  This allows the size and shape of struct
label to be varied without changing the size and shape of these kernel
objects, which become part of the frozen ABI with 5-STABLE.  This opens
the door for boot-time selection of the number of label slots, and hence
changes to the bound on the number of simultaneous labeled policies
at boot-time instead of compile-time.  This also makes it easier to
embed label references in new objects as required for locking/caching
with fine-grained network stack locking, such as inpcb structures.

This change also moves us further in the direction of hiding the
structure of kernel objects from MAC policy modules, not to mention
dramatically reducing the number of '&' symbols appearing in both the
MAC Framework and MAC policy modules, and improving readability.

While this results in minimal performance change with MAC enabled, it
will observably shrink the size of a number of critical kernel data
structures for the !MAC case, and should have a small (but measurable)
performance benefit (i.e., struct vnode, struct socket) do to memory
conservation and reduced cost of zeroing memory.

NOTE: Users of MAC must recompile their kernel and all MAC modules as a
result of this change.  Because this is an API change, third party
MAC modules will also need to be updated to make less use of the '&'
symbol.

Suggestions from:	bmilekic
Obtained from:		TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:		DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-11-12 03:14:31 +00:00
Robert Watson
83b7b0edca Remove the flags argument from mac_externalize_*_label(), as it's not
passed into policies or used internally to the MAC Framework.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-11-06 03:42:43 +00:00
Robert Watson
da77b2fa6b Make MAC_EXTERNALIZE() and MAC_INTERNALIZE() simply take the object
type, rather than "object_label" as the first argument.  This reduces
complexity a little for the consumer, and also makes it easier for
use to rename the underlying entry points in struct mac_policy_obj.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-10-25 15:28:20 +00:00
Robert Watson
6cc24dcbb4 Remove non-VFS related code from mac_vfs.c. Leave:
Extended attribute transaction warning flag if transactions aren't
  supported on the EA implementation being used.

  Debug fallback flag to permit a less conservative fallback if reading
  an on-disk label fails.

  Enforce_fs toggle to enforce file systme access control.

  Debugging counters for file system objects: mounts, vnodes, devfs_dirents.

  Object initialization, destruction, copying, internalization,
  externalization, relabeling for file system objects.

  Life cycle operations for devfs entries.

  Generic extended attribute label implementation for use by UFS, UFS2 in
  multilabel mode.

  Generic single-level label implementation for use by all file systems
  when in singlelabel mode.

  Exec-time transition based on file label entry points.

  Vnode operation access control checks (many).

  Mount operation access control checks (few).

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-10-22 20:29:41 +00:00
Robert Watson
cc7b13bfe0 If the struct mac copied into the kernel has a negative length, return
EINVAL rather than failing the following malloc due to the value being
too large.
2003-09-29 18:35:17 +00:00
Robert Watson
a6a65b05d5 Fix a mac_policy_list reference to be a mac_static_policy_list
reference: this fixes mac_syscall() for static policies when using
optimized locking.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponosred by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-08-26 17:29:02 +00:00
Robert Watson
eb8c7f9992 Introduce two new MAC Framework and MAC policy entry points:
mac_reflect_mbuf_icmp()
  mac_reflect_mbuf_tcp()

These entry points permit MAC policies to do "update in place"
changes to the labels on ICMP and TCP mbuf headers when an ICMP or
TCP response is generated to a packet outside of the context of
an existing socket.  For example, in respond to a ping or a RST
packet to a SYN on a closed port.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-08-21 18:21:22 +00:00
Robert Watson
c096756c00 Add mac_check_vnode_deleteextattr() and mac_check_vnode_listextattr():
explicit access control checks to delete and list extended attributes
on a vnode, rather than implicitly combining with the setextattr and
getextattr checks.  This reflects EA API changes in the kernel made
recently, including the move to explicit VOP's for both of these
operations.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD PRoject
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-08-21 13:53:01 +00:00
Robert Watson
8d8d5ea8f2 Remove about 40 lines of #ifdef/#endif by using new macros
MAC_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC() and MAC_DEBUG_COUNTER_DEC() to maintain
debugging counter values rather than #ifdef'ing the atomic
operations to MAC_DEBUG.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-08-20 19:16:49 +00:00
Robert Watson
19c3e120f0 Attempt to simplify #ifdef logic for MAC_ALWAYS_LABEL_MBUF.
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-08-01 15:45:14 +00:00
Robert Watson
f51e58036e Redesign the externalization APIs from the MAC Framework to
the MAC policy modules to improve robustness against C string
bugs and vulnerabilities.  Following these revisions, all
string construction of labels for export to userspace (or
elsewhere) is performed using the sbuf API, which prevents
the consumer from having to perform laborious and intricate
pointer and buffer checks.  This substantially simplifies
the externalization logic, both at the MAC Framework level,
and in individual policies; this becomes especially useful
when policies export more complex label data, such as with
compartments in Biba and MLS.

Bundled in here are some other minor fixes associated with
externalization: including avoiding malloc while holding the
process mutex in mac_lomac, and hence avoid a failure mode
when printing labels during a downgrade operation due to
the removal of the M_NOWAIT case.

This has been running in the MAC development tree for about
three weeks without problems.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-06-23 01:26:34 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
3b6d965263 Add a f_vnode field to struct file.
Several of the subtypes have an associated vnode which is used for
stuff like the f*() functions.

By giving the vnode a speparate field, a number of checks for the specific
subtype can be replaced simply with a check for f_vnode != NULL, and
we can later free f_data up to subtype specific use.

At this point in time, f_data still points to the vnode, so any code I
might have overlooked will still work.
2003-06-22 08:41:43 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
677b542ea2 Use __FBSDID(). 2003-06-11 00:56:59 +00:00
Robert Watson
b2aef57123 Rename MAC_MAX_POLICIES to MAC_MAX_SLOTS, since the variables and
constants in question refer to the number of label slots, not the
maximum number of policies that may be loaded.  This should reduce
confusion regarding an element in the MAC sysctl MIB, as well as
make it more clear what the affect of changing the compile-time
constants is.

Approved by:	re (jhb)
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-05-08 19:49:42 +00:00
Robert Watson
41a17fe326 Clean up locking for the MAC Framework:
(1) Accept that we're now going to use mutexes, so don't attempt
    to avoid treating them as mutexes.  This cleans up locking
    accessor function names some.

(2) Rename variables to _mtx, _cv, _count, simplifying the naming.

(3) Add a new form of the _busy() primitive that conditionally
    makes the list busy: if there are entries on the list, bump
    the busy count.  If there are no entries, don't bump the busy
    count.  Return a boolean indicating whether or not the busy
    count was bumped.

(4) Break mac_policy_list into two lists: one with the same name
    holding dynamic policies, and a new list, mac_static_policy_list,
    which holds policies loaded before mac_late and without the
    unload flag set.  The static list may be accessed without
    holding the busy count, since it can't change at run-time.

(5) In general, prefer making the list busy conditionally, meaning
    we pay only one mutex lock per entry point if all modules are
    on the static list, rather than two (since we don't have to
    lower the busy count when we're done with the framework).  For
    systems running just Biba or MLS, this will halve the mutex
    accesses in the network stack, and may offer a substantial
    performance benefits.

(6) Lay the groundwork for a dynamic-free kernel option which
    eliminates all locking associated with dynamically loaded or
    unloaded policies, for pre-configured systems requiring
    maximum performance but less run-time flexibility.

These changes have been running for a few weeks on MAC development
branch systems.

Approved by:	re (jhb)
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-05-07 17:49:24 +00:00
Alan Cox
b6e48e0372 - Acquire the vm_object's lock when performing vm_object_page_clean().
- Add a parameter to vm_pageout_flush() that tells vm_pageout_flush()
   whether its caller has locked the vm_object.  (This is a temporary
   measure to bootstrap vm_object locking.)
2003-04-24 04:31:25 +00:00
Robert Watson
2d3db0b823 Update NAI copyright to 2003, missed in earlier commits and merges. 2003-04-18 19:57:37 +00:00
Robert Watson
6d1a6a9a9a mac_init_mbuf_tag() accepts malloc flags, not mbuf allocator flags, so
don't try and convert the argument flags to malloc flags, or we risk
implicitly requesting blocking and generating witness warnings.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-04-15 19:33:23 +00:00
Robert Watson
225bff6f8b Move MAC label storage for mbufs into m_tags from the m_pkthdr structure,
returning some additional room in the first mbuf in a chain, and
avoiding feature-specific contents in the mbuf header.  To do this:

- Modify mbuf_to_label() to extract the tag, returning NULL if not
  found.

- Introduce mac_init_mbuf_tag() which does most of the work
  mac_init_mbuf() used to do, except on an m_tag rather than an
  mbuf.

- Scale back mac_init_mbuf() to perform m_tag allocation and invoke
  mac_init_mbuf_tag().

- Replace mac_destroy_mbuf() with mac_destroy_mbuf_tag(), since
  m_tag's are now GC'd deep in the m_tag/mbuf code rather than
  at a higher level when mbufs are directly free()'d.

- Add mac_copy_mbuf_tag() to support m_copy_pkthdr() and related
  notions.

- Generally change all references to mbuf labels so that they use
  mbuf_to_label() rather than &mbuf->m_pkthdr.label.  This
  required no changes in the MAC policies (yay!).

- Tweak mbuf release routines to not call mac_destroy_mbuf(),
  tag destruction takes care of it for us now.

- Remove MAC magic from m_copy_pkthdr() and m_move_pkthdr() --
  the existing m_tag support does all this for us.  Note that
  we can no longer just zero the m_tag list on the target mbuf,
  rather, we have to delete the chain because m_tag's will
  already be hung off freshly allocated mbuf's.

- Tweak m_tag copying routines so that if we're copying a MAC
  m_tag, we don't do a binary copy, rather, we initialize the
  new storage and do a deep copy of the label.

- Remove use of MAC_FLAG_INITIALIZED in a few bizarre places
  having to do with mbuf header copies previously.

- When an mbuf is copied in ip_input(), we no longer need to
  explicitly copy the label because it will get handled by the
  m_tag code now.

- No longer any weird handling of MAC labels in if_loop.c during
  header copies.

- Add MPC_LOADTIME_FLAG_LABELMBUFS flag to Biba, MLS, mac_test.
  In mac_test, handle the label==NULL case, since it can be
  dynamically loaded.

In order to improve performance with this change, introduce the notion
of "lazy MAC label allocation" -- only allocate m_tag storage for MAC
labels if we're running with a policy that uses MAC labels on mbufs.
Policies declare this intent by setting the MPC_LOADTIME_FLAG_LABELMBUFS
flag in their load-time flags field during declaration.  Note: this
opens up the possibility of post-boot policy modules getting back NULL
slot entries even though they have policy invariants of non-NULL slot
entries, as the policy might have been loaded after the mbuf was
allocated, leaving the mbuf without label storage.  Policies that cannot
handle this case must be declared as NOTLATE, or must be modified.

- mac_labelmbufs holds the current cumulative status as to whether
  any policies require mbuf labeling or not.  This is updated whenever
  the active policy set changes by the function mac_policy_updateflags().
  The function iterates the list and checks whether any have the
  flag set.  Write access to this variable is protected by the policy
  list; read access is currently not protected for performance reasons.
  This might change if it causes problems.

- Add MAC_POLICY_LIST_ASSERT_EXCLUSIVE() to permit the flags update
  function to assert appropriate locks.

- This makes allocation in mac_init_mbuf() conditional on the flag.

Reviewed by:	sam
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-04-14 20:39:06 +00:00
Robert Watson
10eeb10c63 Abstract access to the mbuf header label behind a new function,
mbuf_to_label().  This permits the vast majority of entry point code
to be unaware that labels are stored in m->m_pkthdr.label, such that
we can experiment storage of labels elsewhere (such as in m_tags).

Reviewed by:	sam
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-04-14 18:11:18 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
fe58453891 Introduce an M_ASSERTPKTHDR() macro which performs the very common task
of asserting that an mbuf has a packet header.  Use it instead of hand-
rolled versions wherever applicable.

Submitted by:	Hiten Pandya <hiten@unixdaemons.com>
2003-04-08 14:25:47 +00:00
Robert Watson
5e7ce4785f Modify the mac_init_ipq() MAC Framework entry point to accept an
additional flags argument to indicate blocking disposition, and
pass in M_NOWAIT from the IP reassembly code to indicate that
blocking is not OK when labeling a new IP fragment reassembly
queue.  This should eliminate some of the WITNESS warnings that
have started popping up since fine-grained IP stack locking
started going in; if memory allocation fails, the creation of
the fragment queue will be aborted.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-03-26 15:12:03 +00:00