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author | David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> | 2014-12-01 23:52:53 +0100 |
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committer | David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> | 2014-12-01 23:52:53 +0100 |
commit | 0b0a84154eff56913e91df29de5c3a03a0029e38 (patch) | |
tree | c0c025411f18835dfa8ce302ba6b2eaaf607df20 /security/keys/internal.h | |
parent | KEYS: Simplify KEYRING_SEARCH_{NO,DO}_STATE_CHECK flags (diff) | |
download | linux-0b0a84154eff56913e91df29de5c3a03a0029e38.tar.xz linux-0b0a84154eff56913e91df29de5c3a03a0029e38.zip |
KEYS: request_key() should reget expired keys rather than give EKEYEXPIRED
Since the keyring facility can be viewed as a cache (at least in some
applications), the local expiration time on the key should probably be viewed
as a 'needs updating after this time' property rather than an absolute 'anyone
now wanting to use this object is out of luck' property.
Since request_key() is the main interface for the usage of keys, this should
update or replace an expired key rather than issuing EKEYEXPIRED if the local
expiration has been reached (ie. it should refresh the cache).
For absolute conditions where refreshing the cache probably doesn't help, the
key can be negatively instantiated using KEYCTL_REJECT_KEY with EKEYEXPIRED
given as the error to issue. This will still cause request_key() to return
EKEYEXPIRED as that was explicitly set.
In the future, if the key type has an update op available, we might want to
upcall with the expired key and allow the upcall to update it. We would pass
a different operation name (the first column in /etc/request-key.conf) to the
request-key program.
request_key() returning EKEYEXPIRED is causing an NFS problem which Chuck
Lever describes thusly:
After about 10 minutes, my NFSv4 functional tests fail because the
ownership of the test files goes to "-2". Looking at /proc/keys
shows that the id_resolv keys that map to my test user ID have
expired. The ownership problem persists until the expired keys are
purged from the keyring, and fresh keys are obtained.
I bisected the problem to 3.13 commit b2a4df200d57 ("KEYS: Expand
the capacity of a keyring"). This commit inadvertantly changes the
API contract of the internal function keyring_search_aux().
The root cause appears to be that b2a4df200d57 made "no state check"
the default behavior. "No state check" means the keyring search
iterator function skips checking the key's expiry timeout, and
returns expired keys. request_key_and_link() depends on getting
an -EAGAIN result code to know when to perform an upcall to refresh
an expired key.
This patch can be tested directly by:
keyctl request2 user debug:fred a @s
keyctl timeout %user:debug:fred 3
sleep 4
keyctl request2 user debug:fred a @s
Without the patch, the last command gives error EKEYEXPIRED, but with the
command it gives a new key.
Reported-by: Carl Hetherington <cth@carlh.net>
Reported-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'security/keys/internal.h')
-rw-r--r-- | security/keys/internal.h | 1 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/security/keys/internal.h b/security/keys/internal.h index b8960c4959a5..200e37867336 100644 --- a/security/keys/internal.h +++ b/security/keys/internal.h @@ -117,6 +117,7 @@ struct keyring_search_context { #define KEYRING_SEARCH_NO_UPDATE_TIME 0x0004 /* Don't update times */ #define KEYRING_SEARCH_NO_CHECK_PERM 0x0008 /* Don't check permissions */ #define KEYRING_SEARCH_DETECT_TOO_DEEP 0x0010 /* Give an error on excessive depth */ +#define KEYRING_SEARCH_SKIP_EXPIRED 0x0020 /* Ignore expired keys (intention to replace) */ int (*iterator)(const void *object, void *iterator_data); |