Update Sep 28: discussion on Hacker News

Update Sep 30: kernel lockdown merged into mainline kernel

A couple of days ago I wanted to try out the hot eBPF things using the BPF Compiler Collection (BCC) on my Fedora 30 desktop system, with Linux kernel 5.2.15. I could not load eBPF programs into the kernel: strace revealed that the bpf() system call failed with EPERM :

bpf(BPF_PROG_LOAD,{prog_type=[...]}, 112) = -1 EPERM (Operation not permitted)

So, a lack of privileges. Why? I tried …

running natively as root instead of in a sudo environment.

disabling SELinux completely (instead of running in permissive mode).

mode). following setuid -related hints.

-related hints. building BCC from source to make it more likely that it correctly integrates with my system.

consulting BCC maintainers via GitHub.

No obvious solution, still EPERM .

I jumped on a few more discussions on GitHub and got a hint from GitHub user deg00 (thank you, anonymous person with no GitHub activity and a picture of a snail!). She wrote: “For Fedora 30, the problem is not selinux but kernel-lockdown”.

I did not know what kernel lockdown is, but I wondered how to disable it. I found the following resources useful:

Temporarily disabling kernel lockdown solved the problem

In the resources linked above, we find that there is a so-called sysrq mechanism that can influence kernel behavior. When configured with a 1 in /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq it has the widest set of privileges, including the privilege to lift the kernel lockdown. Sending an x into /proc/sysrq-trigger then actually uses the sysrq mechanism to lift the kernel lockdown.

That indeed worked for me. The following snippet shows the original symptom, despite running as root:

[root@jpx1carb jp]# python3 /usr/share/bcc/examples/hello_world.py bpf: Failed to load program: Operation not permitted Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/share/bcc/examples/hello_world.py", line 12, in BPF(text='int kprobe__sys_clone(void *ctx) { bpf_trace_printk("Hello, World!\

"); return 0; }').trace_print() File "/usr/lib/python3.7/site-packages/bcc/__init__.py", line 344, in __init__ self._trace_autoload() File "/usr/lib/python3.7/site-packages/bcc/__init__.py", line 1090, in _trace_autoload fn = self.load_func(func_name, BPF.KPROBE) File "/usr/lib/python3.7/site-packages/bcc/__init__.py", line 380, in load_func raise Exception("Need super-user privileges to run") Exception: Need super-user privileges to run

The last error message “Need super-user privileges to run” is misleading. The “Operation not permitted” error further above corresponds to the EPERM shown in the strace output above.

This lifts the kernel lockdown via the sysrq mechanism, as discussed:

[root@jpx1carb jp]# echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq [root@jpx1carb jp]# echo x > /proc/sysrq-trigger

Now BCC’s hello world example runs fine:

[root@jpx1carb jp]# python3 /usr/share/bcc/examples/hello_world.py b' gnome-shell-3215 [005] .... 58317.922716: 0: Hello, World!' b' Socket Thread-26509 [001] .... 58322.093849: 0: Hello, World!' b' gnome-shell-3215 [003] .... 58322.923562: 0: Hello, World!' [...]

Cool, stuff works.

What the heck just happened? I did not understand a thing and correspondingly started to read a bit about these new shiny topics.

What is the “kernel lockdown”?

Most importantly the concept of the “kernel lockdown” seems to still be evolving.

The the mission statement behind the kernel lockdown is hard to put into words without stepping onto anyone’s toes. This is how RedHat worded the goal in 2017:

The kernel lockdown feature is designed to prevent both direct and indirect access to a running kernel image, attempting to protect against unauthorised modification of the kernel image and to prevent access to security and cryptographic data located in kernel memory, whilst still permitting driver modules to be loaded.

However, that goal was and seems to still be subject to a technical as well as a political debate in the Linux ecosystem: In 2018, Zack Brown from LINUX Journal published a well-researched and quite entertaining article summarizing the heated discussion about the initial set of lockdown patches. If you would like to try to understand what kernel lockdown is (or tries to be) then that article is worth reading. A quote from the article’s last few paragraphs:

This type of discussion is unusual for kernel development, but not for this particular type of patch. The attempts to slip code into the kernel that will enable a vendor to lock users out of controlling their own systems always tend to involve the two sides completely talking past each other. Linus and Andy were unable to get Matthew to address the issue the way they wanted, and Matthew was unable to convince Linus and Andy that his technical explanations were genuine and legitimate.

Also, Jonathan Corbet’s LWN article titled Kernel lockdown in 4.17? from April 2018 is worth a read.

And how do I know if my kernel is locked down? dmesg!

Here’s some dmesg output from my system. It is quite revealing, almost prose:

[ 0.000000] Kernel is locked down from EFI secure boot; see man kernel_lockdown.7 [...] [ 2.198433] Lockdown: systemd: BPF is restricted; see man kernel_lockdown.7 [...] [58310.913828] Lifting lockdown

First, as you can see, the kernel told me exactly that it is “locked down” (even providing the reason: because EFI secure boot is enabled on my system).

Secondly, it was kind enough to say that this affects (e)BPF things! Maybe I should read the kernel messages more often :-).

Thirdly, after quite a bit of system uptime, the “Lifting lockdown” was emitted in response to, well, me lifting the lockdown with the above-mentioned sysrq mechanism.

That is, if you wonder if and how this affects your system, try doing a dmesg | grep lockdown !

The kernel acting “differently depending on some really esoteric detail in how it was booted”…?

When I approached the BCC maintainers about the EPERM error on Fedora 30 they first responded with (basically) “it’s working for me”. Someone actually booted a VM with a fresh Fedora 30 install. And they were unable to reproduce. How can that be? The difference was whether secure boot was enabled or not: it was for my actual desktop machine, but not for their VM setup. That is quite a lesson learned, and maybe an important take-home message from this blog post.

This annoying debugging experience was predicted by Linus Torvalds. A quote from one of his initial reviews of the kernel lockdown patches (source, April 2018):

I do not want my kernel to act differently depending on some really esoteric detail in how it was booted. That is fundamentally wrong. […] Is that really so hard to understand? […] Look at it this way: maybe lockdown breaks some application because that app does something odd. I get a report of that happening, and it so happens that the reporter is running the same distro I am, so I try it with his exact kernel configuration, and it works for me. […] It is *entirely* non-obvious that the reporter happened to run a distro kernel that had secure boot enabled, and I obviously do not.

Well, he was right.

Which kernel versions have the lockdown feature built-in?

Lockdown did not yet land in the mainline kernel. My Fedora 30 with kernel 5.2.15 is affected (with a specific variant of the lockdown patches, not necessarily the final thing!) because RedHat has chosen to build the lockdown patches into recent Fedora kernels, to try it out in the wild.

Will it land in the mainline kernel? When? And how will it behave, exactly? Just a couple of days ago Phoronix published an interesting article, titled Kernel Lockdown Feature Will Try To Land For Linux 5.4. Quote:

After going through 40+ rounds of revisions and review, the Linux kernel “LOCKDOWN” feature might finally make it into the Linux 5.4 mainline kernel. While not yet acted upon by Linus Torvalds with the Linux 5.4 merge window not opening until next week, James Morris has submitted a pull request introducing the kernel lockdown mode for Linux 5.4. The kernel lockdown support was previously rejected from mainline but since then it’s been separated from the EFI Secure Boot code as well as being implemented as a Linux security module (LSM) to address some of the earlier concerns over the code. There’s also been other improvements to the design of this module.

Various organizations seem to be pushing hard for this feature to land. It is taking long, but convergence around the details seems to take place.

What is the relationship between kernel lockdown and (e)BPF?

I think it is quite fair to ask: does it make sense that all-things-BPF are affected by the kernel lockdown feature? What does lockdown even have to do with eBPF in the first place?

I should say that I am not super qualified to talk about this because I have only researched this topic for about a day now. But I find highly interesting that

these questions seemingly have been under active debate since the first lockdown patch proposals

these questions seem to still be actively debated!

Andy Lutomirski reviewed in 2018:

“bpf: Restrict kernel image access functions when the kernel is locked

down”: This patch just sucks in general. At the very least, it should

only apply to […] But you should probably just force all eBPF

users through the unprivileged path when locked down instead, since eBPF

is really quite useful even with the stricter verification mode.

This shows that there was some pretty fundamental debate about the relationship between eBPF and kernel lockdown from the start.

I believe that the following quote shows how eBPF can, in general, conflict with the goal(s) of kernel lockdown (commit message of a 2019 version lockdown patch fragment):

From: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> There are some bpf functions can be used to read kernel memory: bpf_probe_read, bpf_probe_write_user and bpf_trace_printk. These allow private keys in kernel memory (e.g. the hibernation image signing key) to be read by an eBPF program and kernel memory to be altered without restriction. Disable them if the kernel has been locked down in confidentiality mode. Suggested-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Matthew Garrett <mjg59@google.com> cc: netdev@vger.kernel.org cc: Chun-Yi Lee <jlee@suse.com> cc: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Cc: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>

This commit message rather convincingly justifies that something needs to be done about eBPF when the kernel is locked down (so that the goals of the lockdown do not get undermined!). However, it is not entirely clear what exactly should be done, how exactly eBPF is supposed to be affected, how its inner workings and aspects are to be confined when the kernel is locked down: what follows is a reply from Andy Lutomirski to the above’s commit message: “:) This is yet another reason to get the new improved bpf_probe_user_read stuff landed!”

And indeed, only last month (August 2019) Andy published a work-in-progress patch set titled bpf: A bit of progress toward unprivileged use.

What I learned is that with the current Fedora 30 and its 5.2.x kernel I neither see the “final” lockdown feature nor the “final” relationship between lockdown and eBPF. This is very much work in progress, worse than “cutting edge”: what works today might break tomorrow, with the next kernel update :-)!

By the way, I started to look into eBPF for https://github.com/jgehrcke/goeffel, a tool for measuring the resource utilization of a specific process over time.

Update Sept 30: lockdown just landed in the mainline kernel, wow! Quote from the commit message, clarifying important topics (such as that lockdown will not be tightly coupled to secure boot):

This is the latest iteration of the kernel lockdown patchset, from Matthew Garrett, David Howells and others. From the original description: This patchset introduces an optional kernel lockdown feature, intended to strengthen the boundary between UID 0 and the kernel. When enabled, various pieces of kernel functionality are restricted. Applications that rely on low-level access to either hardware or the kernel may cease working as a result - therefore this should not be enabled without appropriate evaluation beforehand. The majority of mainstream distributions have been carrying variants of this patchset for many years now, so there's value in providing a doesn't meet every distribution requirement, but gets us much closer to not requiring external patches. There are two major changes since this was last proposed for mainline: - Separating lockdown from EFI secure boot. Background discussion is covered here: https://lwn.net/Articles/751061/ - Implementation as an LSM, with a default stackable lockdown LSM module. This allows the lockdown feature to be policy-driven, rather than encoding an implicit policy within the mechanism.

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Sept 26, 2019: First published on September 26, 2019

Sept 27: Significantly edited on September 27

Sept 28: added note about Hacker News discussion thread

Sept 30: added paragraph about kernel lockdown merged into mainline kernel