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      1 // Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
      2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
      3 // found in the LICENSE file.
      4 
      5 #ifndef SANDBOX_LINUX_SECCOMP_BPF_ERRORCODE_H__
      6 #define SANDBOX_LINUX_SECCOMP_BPF_ERRORCODE_H__
      7 
      8 #include "sandbox/linux/seccomp-bpf/linux_seccomp.h"
      9 #include "sandbox/linux/seccomp-bpf/trap.h"
     10 
     11 namespace playground2 {
     12 
     13 struct arch_seccomp_data;
     14 
     15 // This class holds all the possible values that can be returned by a sandbox
     16 // policy.
     17 // We can either wrap a symbolic ErrorCode (i.e. ERR_XXX enum values), an
     18 // errno value (in the range 0..4095), a pointer to a TrapFnc callback
     19 // handling a SECCOMP_RET_TRAP trap, or a complex constraint.
     20 // All of the commonly used values are stored in the "err_" field. So, code
     21 // that is using the ErrorCode class typically operates on a single 32bit
     22 // field.
     23 class ErrorCode {
     24  public:
     25   enum {
     26     // Allow this system call. The value of ERR_ALLOWED is pretty much
     27     // completely arbitrary. But we want to pick it so that is is unlikely
     28     // to be passed in accidentally, when the user intended to return an
     29     // "errno" (see below) value instead.
     30     ERR_ALLOWED   = 0x04000000,
     31 
     32     // Deny the system call with a particular "errno" value.
     33     // N.B.: It is also possible to return "0" here. That would normally
     34     //       indicate success, but it won't actually run the system call.
     35     //       This is very different from return ERR_ALLOWED.
     36     ERR_MIN_ERRNO = 0,
     37     // TODO(markus): Android only supports errno up to 255
     38     // (crbug.com/181647).
     39     ERR_MAX_ERRNO = 4095,
     40   };
     41 
     42   // While BPF filter programs always operate on 32bit quantities, the kernel
     43   // always sees system call arguments as 64bit values. This statement is true
     44   // no matter whether the host system is natively operating in 32bit or 64bit.
     45   // The BPF compiler hides the fact that BPF instructions cannot directly
     46   // access 64bit quantities. But policies are still advised to specify whether
     47   // a system call expects a 32bit or a 64bit quantity.
     48   enum ArgType {
     49     // When passed as an argument to Sandbox::Cond(), TP_32BIT requests that
     50     // the conditional test should operate on the 32bit part of the system call
     51     // argument.
     52     // On 64bit architectures, this verifies that user space did not pass
     53     // a 64bit value as an argument to the system call. If it did, that will be
     54     // interpreted as an attempt at breaking the sandbox and results in the
     55     // program getting terminated.
     56     // In other words, only perform a 32bit test, if you are sure this
     57     // particular system call would never legitimately take a 64bit
     58     // argument.
     59     // Implementation detail: TP_32BIT does two things. 1) it restricts the
     60     // conditional test to operating on the LSB only, and 2) it adds code to
     61     // the BPF filter program verifying that the MSB  the kernel received from
     62     // user space is either 0, or 0xFFFFFFFF; the latter is acceptable, iff bit
     63     // 31 was set in the system call argument. It deals with 32bit arguments
     64     // having been sign extended.
     65     TP_32BIT,
     66 
     67     // When passed as an argument to Sandbox::Cond(), TP_64BIT requests that
     68     // the conditional test should operate on the full 64bit argument. It is
     69     // generally harmless to perform a 64bit test on 32bit systems, as the
     70     // kernel will always see the top 32 bits of all arguments as zero'd out.
     71     // This approach has the desirable property that for tests of pointer
     72     // values, we can always use TP_64BIT no matter the host architecture.
     73     // But of course, that also means, it is possible to write conditional
     74     // policies that turn into no-ops on 32bit systems; this is by design.
     75     TP_64BIT,
     76   };
     77 
     78   enum Operation {
     79     // Test whether the system call argument is equal to the operand.
     80     OP_EQUAL,
     81 
     82     // Test whether the system call argument is greater (or equal) to the
     83     // operand. Please note that all tests always operate on unsigned
     84     // values. You can generally emulate signed tests, if that's what you
     85     // need.
     86     // TODO(markus): Check whether we should automatically emulate signed
     87     //               operations.
     88     OP_GREATER_UNSIGNED, OP_GREATER_EQUAL_UNSIGNED,
     89 
     90     // Tests a system call argument against a bit mask.
     91     // The "ALL_BITS" variant performs this test: "arg & mask == mask"
     92     // This implies that a mask of zero always results in a passing test.
     93     // The "ANY_BITS" variant performs this test: "arg & mask != 0"
     94     // This implies that a mask of zero always results in a failing test.
     95     OP_HAS_ALL_BITS, OP_HAS_ANY_BITS,
     96 
     97     // Total number of operations.
     98     OP_NUM_OPS,
     99   };
    100 
    101   enum ErrorType {
    102     ET_INVALID, ET_SIMPLE, ET_TRAP, ET_COND,
    103   };
    104 
    105   // We allow the default constructor, as it makes the ErrorCode class
    106   // much easier to use. But if we ever encounter an invalid ErrorCode
    107   // when compiling a BPF filter, we deliberately generate an invalid
    108   // program that will get flagged both by our Verifier class and by
    109   // the Linux kernel.
    110   ErrorCode() :
    111       error_type_(ET_INVALID),
    112       err_(SECCOMP_RET_INVALID) {
    113   }
    114   explicit ErrorCode(int err);
    115 
    116   // For all practical purposes, ErrorCodes are treated as if they were
    117   // structs. The copy constructor and assignment operator are trivial and
    118   // we do not need to explicitly specify them.
    119   // Most notably, it is in fact perfectly OK to directly copy the passed_ and
    120   // failed_ field. They only ever get set by our private constructor, and the
    121   // callers handle life-cycle management for these objects.
    122 
    123   // Destructor
    124   ~ErrorCode() { }
    125 
    126   bool Equals(const ErrorCode& err) const;
    127   bool LessThan(const ErrorCode& err) const;
    128 
    129   uint32_t err() const { return err_; }
    130   ErrorType error_type() const { return error_type_; }
    131 
    132   bool safe() const { return safe_; }
    133 
    134   uint64_t value() const { return value_; }
    135   int argno() const { return argno_; }
    136   ArgType width() const { return width_; }
    137   Operation op() const { return op_; }
    138   const ErrorCode *passed() const { return passed_; }
    139   const ErrorCode *failed() const { return failed_; }
    140 
    141   struct LessThan {
    142     bool operator()(const ErrorCode& a, const ErrorCode& b) const {
    143       return a.LessThan(b);
    144     }
    145   };
    146 
    147  private:
    148   friend class CodeGen;
    149   friend class Sandbox;
    150   friend class Trap;
    151 
    152   // If we are wrapping a callback, we must assign a unique id. This id is
    153   // how the kernel tells us which one of our different SECCOMP_RET_TRAP
    154   // cases has been triggered.
    155   ErrorCode(Trap::TrapFnc fnc, const void *aux, bool safe, uint16_t id);
    156 
    157   // Some system calls require inspection of arguments. This constructor
    158   // allows us to specify additional constraints.
    159   ErrorCode(int argno, ArgType width, Operation op, uint64_t value,
    160             const ErrorCode *passed, const ErrorCode *failed);
    161 
    162   ErrorType error_type_;
    163 
    164   union {
    165     // Fields needed for SECCOMP_RET_TRAP callbacks
    166     struct {
    167       Trap::TrapFnc fnc_;        // Callback function and arg, if trap was
    168       void          *aux_;       //   triggered by the kernel's BPF filter.
    169       bool          safe_;       // Keep sandbox active while calling fnc_()
    170     };
    171 
    172     // Fields needed when inspecting additional arguments.
    173     struct {
    174       uint64_t  value_;          // Value that we are comparing with.
    175       int       argno_;          // Syscall arg number that we are inspecting.
    176       ArgType   width_;          // Whether we are looking at a 32/64bit value.
    177       Operation op_;             // Comparison operation.
    178       const ErrorCode *passed_;  // Value to be returned if comparison passed,
    179       const ErrorCode *failed_;  //   or if it failed.
    180     };
    181   };
    182 
    183   // 32bit field used for all possible types of ErrorCode values. This is
    184   // the value that uniquely identifies any ErrorCode and it (typically) can
    185   // be emitted directly into a BPF filter program.
    186   uint32_t err_;
    187 
    188 };
    189 
    190 }  // namespace
    191 
    192 #endif  // SANDBOX_LINUX_SECCOMP_BPF_ERRORCODE_H__
    193