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io_uring and userns mediation are encoding permissions on the class byte. This is a mistake that should never have been allowed. With the addition of rule priorities the class byte mediates rule, that ensure the kernel can determine a class is being mediated is given the highest priority possible, to ensure class mediation can not be removed by a deny rule. See 61b7568e1 ("parser: bug fix mediates_X stub rules.") for details. Unfortunately this breaks rule classes that encode permissions on the class byte, because those rules will always have a lower priority and the class mediates rule will always be selected over them resulting in only the class mediates permission being on the rule class state. Fix this by adding the mediaties class rules for these rule classes with the lowest priority possible. This means that any rule mediating the class will wipe out the mediates class rule. So add a new mediates class rule at the same priority, as the rule being added. This is a naive implementation and does result in more mediates rules being added than necessary. The rule class could keep track of the highest priority rule that had been added, and use that to reduce the number of mediates rules it adds for the class. Technically we could also get away with not adding the rules for allow rules, as the kernel doesn't actually check the encoded permission but whether the class state is not the trap state. But it is required with deny rules to ensure the deny rule doesn't result in permissions being removed from the class, resulting in the kernel thinking it is unmediated. We also want to ensure that mediation is encoded for other rule types like prompt, and in the future the kernel could check the permission so we do want to guarantee that the class state has the MAY_READ permission on it. Note: there is another set of classes (file, mqueue, dbus, ...) which encodes a default rule permission as class .* <perm> this encoding is unfortunate in that it will also add the permission to the class byte, but also sets up following states with the permission. thankfully, this accespt anything, including nothing generally isn't valid in the nothing case (eg. a file without any absolute name). For this set of classes, the high priority mediates rule just ensures that the null match case does not have permission. Fixes: 61b7568e1 parser: bug fix mediates_X stub rules. Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com> MR: https://gitlab.com/apparmor/apparmor/-/merge_requests/1307 Approved-by: Georgia Garcia <georgia.garcia@canonical.com> Merged-by: John Johansen <john@jjmx.net>
The apparmor_parser allows you to add, replace, and remove AppArmor policy through the use of command line options. The default is to add. `apparmor_parser --help` shows what the command line options are. You can also find more information at https://wiki.apparmor.net -- The AppArmor development team