ipfw uid/gid to match listening TCP sockets?
Yar Tikhiy
yar at comp.chem.msu.su
Tue Apr 8 12:43:36 UTC 2008
On Tue, Apr 8, 2008 at 3:19 PM, Robert Watson <rwatson at freebsd.org> wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, 7 Apr 2008, Yar Tikhiy wrote:
>
>
> > Our ipfw currently doesn't seem to match this host's traffic by uid/gid if
> the traffic goes to a listening TCP socket. E.g., if one tries to allow
> passive data connections to a local anonymous FTP server as follows, it
> won't work:
> >
> > ipfw add 10000 allow tcp from any to me dst-port 49152-65535 uid
> ftp in keep-state
> >
> > This behaviour is obvious from ip_fw2.c:
> >
> > 2009 if (proto == IPPROTO_TCP) {
> > 2010 wildcard = 0;
> > 2011 pi = &tcbinfo;
> > 2012 } else if (proto == IPPROTO_UDP) {
> > 2013 wildcard = INPLOOKUP_WILDCARD;
> > 2014 pi = &udbinfo;
> > 2015 } else
> > 2016 return 0;
> >
> > I.e., it is OK for UDP to match PCBs (essentially sockets) with a wildcard
> foreign (remote) address, but not for TCP.
> >
> > I wonder if there will be any security or whatever issues if the wildcard
> flag is set for TCP, too. The only peculiarity I can see now is that
> listening sockets shouldn't generate outbound traffic; as soon a 3-way
> handshake starts, a separate PCB is created. Thus a listening socket can
> match inbound packets only.
> >
> > Are there any other points I missed? Thanks!
> >
>
> None of this code really makes very much sense anyway, and is vulnerable to
> a number of races and semantic inconsistencies, not to mention application
> behavior that confuses it (such as sshd's opening forwarded sockets using a
> privileged credential). I'm not sure I agree with your analysis that listen
> sockets don't generate packets, btw: the syncache generates packets that are
> not yet from a specific socket, so arguably they are from the listen socket.
> All that said, I don't see any reason not to match listen sockets in the pcb
> lookup here.
Thank you for these points! Matching packets from listen sockets makes
the case even simpler; then it's the matter of changing the "wildcard = 0;"
to "wildcard = INPLOOKUP_WILDCARD;". At least matching listen sockets
doesn't seem to break things not already broken.
> Be aware that uid/gid/jail rules may become less maintainable as our TCP
> locking becomes more mature. We already jump through some uncomfortable
> hoops to keep it working, but I'm not sure how long that can go on.
I've always viewed uid/gid rules as a hack that works for now. In the long run
we may want to consider an API allowing privileged apps to punch holes
in the firewall in a controllable manner. Of course, the API should be agnostic
of the particular firewall type. Then, e.g., ftpd(8) would be able to
open its current
passive data port only and to a single remote IP, and the whole port
range wouldn't
need to be exposed. Such holes could be handled as dynamic rules/states so that
they don't stay there forever if the app crashes.
--
Yar
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