[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[Xen-devel] [PATCH 09/10] flask/policy: Add user and constraint examples



These examples show how to use constraints and the user field of the
security label to prevent communication between virtual machines of
different customers in a multi-tenant environment.

Signed-off-by: Daniel De Graaf <dgdegra@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
 docs/misc/xsm-flask.txt                      |   42 +++++++++++++++++++------
 tools/flask/policy/policy/constraints        |   15 ++++++++-
 tools/flask/policy/policy/modules/xen/xen.te |   28 +++++++++++++----
 tools/flask/policy/policy/users              |   14 ++------
 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-)

diff --git a/docs/misc/xsm-flask.txt b/docs/misc/xsm-flask.txt
index 2eb75d6..285bb9f 100644
--- a/docs/misc/xsm-flask.txt
+++ b/docs/misc/xsm-flask.txt
@@ -27,14 +27,17 @@ FLASK_ENABLE to "y"; this change requires a make clean and 
rebuild.
 
 FLASK uses only one domain configuration parameter (seclabel) defining the
 full security label of the newly created domain. If using the example policy,
-"seclabel='system_u:system_r:domU_t'" would be used for normal domains. For
-simple policies including the example policy, the user and role portions of the
-label are unused and will always be "system_u:system_r".  Most of FLASK policy
-consists of defining the interactions allowed between different types (domU_t
-would be the type in this example); FLASK policy does not distinguish between
-domains with the same type. This is the same format as used for SELinux
-labeling; see http://selinuxproject.org for more details on the use of the 
user,
-role, and optional MLS/MCS labels.
+"seclabel='system_u:system_r:domU_t'" is an example of a normal domain. The
+labels are in the same format as SELinux labels; see http://selinuxproject.org
+for more details on the use of the user, role, and optional MLS/MCS labels.
+
+FLASK policy overview
+---------------------
+
+Most of FLASK policy consists of defining the interactions allowed between
+different types (domU_t would be the type in this example). For simple 
policies,
+only type enforcement is used and the user and role are set to system_u and
+system_r for all domains.
 
 The FLASK security framework is mostly configured using a security policy file.
 This policy file is not normally generated during the Xen build process because
@@ -57,8 +60,27 @@ that can be used without dom0 disaggregation. It has two 
main types for domUs:
  - domU_t is a domain that can communicate with any other domU_t
  - isolated_domU_t can only communicate with dom0
 
-More types can be added to allow groups of domains to communicate without
-allowing communication between groups, or only between certain groups.
+One disadvantage of using type enforcement to enforce isolation is that a new
+type is needed for each group of domains. In addition, it is not possible to
+allow isolated_domU_t cannot to create loopback event channels without allowing
+two domains of type isolated_domU_t to communicate with one another.
+
+Users and roles
+---------------
+
+Users are defined in tools/flask/policy/policy/users. The example policy 
defines
+two users (customer_1 and customer_2) in addition to the system user system_u.
+Users are visible in the labels of domains and associated objects (event
+channels); in the example policy, "customer_1:vm_r:domU_t" is a valid label for
+the customer_1 user.
+
+Access control rules involving users and roles are defined in the policy
+constraints file (tools/flask/policy/policy/constraints). The example policy
+provides constraints that prevent different users from communicating using
+grants or event channels, while still allowing communication with dom0.
+
+Resource Policy
+---------------
 
 The example policy also includes a resource type (nic_dev_t) for device
 passthrough, configured to allow use by domU_t. To label the PCI device 3:2.0
diff --git a/tools/flask/policy/policy/constraints 
b/tools/flask/policy/policy/constraints
index beb949c..765ed4d 100644
--- a/tools/flask/policy/policy/constraints
+++ b/tools/flask/policy/policy/constraints
@@ -22,6 +22,19 @@
 # role_op : == | != | eq | dom | domby | incomp
 #
 # names : name | { name_list }
-# name_list : name | name_list name            
+# name_list : name | name_list name
 #
 
+# Prevent event channels and grants between different customers
+
+constrain event bind (
+       u1 == system_u or
+       u2 == system_u or
+       u1 == u2
+);
+
+constrain grant { map_read map_write copy } (
+       u1 == system_u or
+       u2 == system_u or
+       u1 == u2
+);
diff --git a/tools/flask/policy/policy/modules/xen/xen.te 
b/tools/flask/policy/policy/modules/xen/xen.te
index ac52c3f..67dd0df 100644
--- a/tools/flask/policy/policy/modules/xen/xen.te
+++ b/tools/flask/policy/policy/modules/xen/xen.te
@@ -22,22 +22,22 @@ attribute mls_priv;
 
################################################################################
 
 # The hypervisor itself
-type xen_t, xen_type, domain_type, mls_priv;
+type xen_t, xen_type, mls_priv;
 
 # Domain 0
 type dom0_t, domain_type, mls_priv;
 
 # Untracked I/O memory (pseudo-domain)
-type domio_t, domain_type;
+type domio_t, xen_type;
 
 # Xen heap (pseudo-domain)
-type domxen_t, domain_type;
+type domxen_t, xen_type;
 
 # Unlabeled objects
-type unlabeled_t, domain_type;
+type unlabeled_t, xen_type;
 
 # The XSM/FLASK security server
-type security_t, domain_type;
+type security_t, xen_type;
 
 # Unlabeled device resources
 # Note: don't allow access to these types directly; see below for how to label
@@ -143,7 +143,11 @@ delegate_devices(dom0_t, domU_t)
 
 
################################################################################
 #
-# Constraints
+# Policy constraints
+#
+# Neverallow rules will cause the policy build to fail if an allow rule exists
+# that violates the expression. This is used to ensure proper labeling of
+# objects.
 #
 
################################################################################
 
@@ -159,9 +163,19 @@ neverallow * ~event_type:event { create send status };
 
 
################################################################################
 #
-# Labels for initial SIDs and system role
+# Roles
 #
 
################################################################################
 
+# The object role (object_r) is used for devices, resources, and event 
channels;
+# it does not need to be defined here and should not be used for domains.
+
+# The system role is used for utility domains and pseudo-domains
 role system_r;
 role system_r types { xen_type domain_type };
+# If you want to prevent domUs from being placed in system_r:
+##role system_r types { xen_type dom0_t };
+
+# The vm role is used for customer virtual machines
+role vm_r;
+role vm_r types { domain_type -dom0_t };
diff --git a/tools/flask/policy/policy/users b/tools/flask/policy/policy/users
index a0205e5..35ed8a9 100644
--- a/tools/flask/policy/policy/users
+++ b/tools/flask/policy/policy/users
@@ -3,15 +3,9 @@
 # System User configuration.
 #
 
-#
-# gen_user(username, role_set, mls_defaultlevel, mls_range)
-#
-
-#
-# system_u is the user identity for system processes and objects.
-# There should be no corresponding Unix user identity for system,
-# and a user process should never be assigned the system user
-# identity.
-#
+# system_u is the user identity for system domains and objects
 gen_user(system_u,, system_r, s0, s0 - mls_systemhigh)
 
+# Other users are defined using the vm role
+gen_user(customer_1,, vm_r, s0, s0)
+gen_user(customer_2,, vm_r, s0, s0)
-- 
1.7.7.6


_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel


 


Rackspace

Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our
servers 24x7x365 and backed by RackSpace's Fanatical Support®.