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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH for-4.9] livepatch: Declare live patching as a supported feature



On 07/03/2017 03:53 PM, Ross Lagerwall wrote:
> On 06/30/2017 02:42 PM, George Dunlap wrote:
>> On 06/28/2017 05:18 PM, Ross Lagerwall wrote:
>>> On 06/27/2017 10:17 AM, George Dunlap wrote:
>>>> On 26/06/17 18:30, Andrew Cooper wrote:
>>>>> On 26/06/17 18:00, George Dunlap wrote:
>>>>>> On 26/06/17 16:36, Ross Lagerwall wrote:
>>> ...
>>>> You seem to be simply refusing to use your imagination.  Step back.
>>>> Imagine yourself in one year.  You come to the office and find an
>>>> e-mail
>>>> on security@ which says, "Livepatch tools open a security hole when
>>>> compiling with gcc x.yy".  You realize that XenVerson ${LATEST-2} uses
>>>> gcc x.yy, so you take a closer look at that livepatch, only to discover
>>>> that the livepatches generated actually do contain the bug, but you
>>>> missed it because ${LATEST-[0,1]} were perfectly fine (since they used
>>>> newer versions of gcc), the difference was subtle, and it passed all
>>>> the
>>>> functional tests.
>>>>
>>>> Now all of the customers that have applied those patches are
>>>> vulnerable.
>>>>
>>>> Do you:
>>>>
>>>> 1. Tell the reporter to post it publicly to xen-devel immediately,
>>>> since
>>>> livepatch tools are not security supported -- thus "zero-day"-ing all
>>>> your customers (as well as anyone else who happens to have used x.yy to
>>>> build a hypervisor)?
>>>>
>>>> 2. Secretly take advantage of Citrix' privileged position on the
>>>> security list, and try to get an update out to your customers before it
>>>> gets announced (but allowing everyone *else* using gcc x.yy to
>>>> experience a zero-day)?
>>>>
>>>> 3. Issue an XSA so that everyone has the opportunity to fix things up
>>>> before making a public announcement, and so that anyone not on the
>>>> embargo list gets an alert, so they know to either update their own
>>>> livepatches, or look for updates from their software provider?
>>>>
>>>> I think #3 is the only possible choice.
>>>>
>>>>    -George
>>>>
>>>
>>> The issue here is that any bug in livepatch-build-tools which still
>>> results in output being generated would be a security issue, because
>>> someone might have used it to patch a security issue.
>>> livepatch-build-tools is certainly not stable enough yet (ever?) to be
>>> treated in this fashion.
>>
>> You didn't answer my question.  If the situation described happens, what
>> position do you want Andrew to be put in?  (If I missed a potential
>> action, let me know.)
>>
> 
> I would choose #3 as it is the obvious choice. But I still don't think
> it is a sensible idea to have security support for the build tools, at
> least at this point. The same scenario could be posed for a nasty bug
> that affects Xen 4.4 only, but it is now just out of security support.
> IMO something being not supported doesn't preclude it from having an XSA
> released if there is a particularly nasty vulnerability found.

Well basically I think we agree, but we're using different terms.  You
want to say, "This isn't security supported, but if important bug is
actually found then we'll issue an XSA".  I want to say, "This is
security supported, because if an important bug is actually found we'll
issue an XSA."

So it seems to me there are likely two things that make you resistant to
calling it "security supported":

1. The fear that we'll be issuing XSAs over trivial things that don't matter

2. The fear that people will not do due diligence when creating patches
with the tools.

I think #1 is just a misconception.  *Every* bug reported to us about
any part of the code we go through the process of trying to determine
its impact and whether we need to issue an XSA or not.  All of the
examples put forward of things we don't want to issue an XSA for are
things that I'm sure we would not issue an XSA for.

For #2, that is a reasonable fear, but we can deal with that in a
different way than calling the tools "unsupported".  We can, for
instance, mention that in the documents.  We can add a warning message
that the build tools output saying that the result should be manually
inspected for correctness.

 -George


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