Mirror of BoringSSL (grpc依赖)
https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl
You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
140 lines
6.6 KiB
140 lines
6.6 KiB
# Using BoringSSL in a Sandbox |
|
|
|
Sandboxes are a valuable tool for securing applications, so BoringSSL aims to |
|
support them. However, it is difficult to make concrete API guarantees with |
|
sandboxes. Sandboxes remove low-level OS resources and system calls, which |
|
breaks platform abstractions. A syscall-filtering sandbox may, for instance, be |
|
sensitive to otherwise non-breaking changes to use newer syscalls |
|
in either BoringSSL or the C library. |
|
|
|
Some functions in BoringSSL, such as `BIO_new_file`, inherently need OS |
|
resources like the filesystem. We assume that sandboxed consumers either avoid |
|
those functions or make necessary resources available. Other functions like |
|
`RSA_sign` are purely computational, but still have some baseline OS |
|
dependencies. |
|
|
|
Sandboxes which drop privileges partway through a process's lifetime are |
|
additionally sensitive to OS resources retained across the transitions. For |
|
instance, if a library function internally opened and retained a handle to the |
|
user's home directory, and then the application called `chroot`, that handle |
|
would be a sandbox escape. |
|
|
|
This document attempts to describe these baseline OS dependencies and long-lived |
|
internal resources. These dependencies may change over time, but we aim to |
|
[work with sandboxed consumers](/BREAKING-CHANGES.md) when they do. However, |
|
each sandbox imposes different constraints, so, above all, sandboxed consumers |
|
must have ample test coverage to detect issues as they arise. |
|
|
|
## Baseline dependencies |
|
|
|
Callers must assume that any BoringSSL function may perform one of the following |
|
operations: |
|
|
|
### Memory allocation |
|
|
|
Any BoringSSL function may allocate memory via `malloc` and related functions. |
|
|
|
### Thread synchronization |
|
|
|
Any BoringSSL function may call into the platform's thread synchronization |
|
primitives, including read/write locks and the equivalent of `pthread_once`. |
|
These must succeed, or BoringSSL will abort the process. Callers, however, can |
|
assume that BoringSSL functions will not spawn internal threads, unless |
|
otherwise documented. |
|
|
|
Syscall-filtering sandboxes should note that BoringSSL uses `pthread_rwlock_t` |
|
on POSIX systems, which is less common and may not be part of other libraries' |
|
syscall surface. Additionally, thread synchronization primitives usually have an |
|
atomics-based fast path. If a sandbox blocks a necessary pthreads syscall, it |
|
may not show up in testing without lock contention. |
|
|
|
### Standard error |
|
|
|
Any BoringSSL function may write to `stderr` or file descriptor |
|
`STDERR_FILENO` (2), either via `FILE` APIs or low-level functions like `write`. |
|
Writes to `stderr` may fail, but there must some file at `STDERR_FILENO` which |
|
will tolerate error messages from BoringSSL. (The file descriptor must be |
|
allocated so calls to `open` do not accidentally open something else there.) |
|
|
|
Note some C standard library implementations also log to `stderr`, so callers |
|
should ensure this regardless. |
|
|
|
### Entropy |
|
|
|
Any BoringSSL function may draw entropy from the OS. On Windows, this uses |
|
`RtlGenRandom` and, on POSIX systems, this uses `getrandom`, `getentropy`, or a |
|
`read` from a file descriptor to `/dev/urandom`. These operations must succeed |
|
or BoringSSL will abort the process. BoringSSL only probes for `getrandom` |
|
support once and assumes support is consistent for the lifetime of the address |
|
space (and any copies made via `fork`). If a syscall-filtering sandbox is |
|
enabled partway through this lifetime and changes whether `getrandom` works, |
|
BoringSSL may abort the process. Sandboxes are recommended to allow |
|
`getrandom`. |
|
|
|
Note even deterministic algorithms may require OS entropy. For example, |
|
RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 is deterministic, but BoringSSL draws entropy to implement |
|
RSA blinding. |
|
|
|
Entropy gathering additionally has some initialization dependencies described in |
|
the following section. |
|
|
|
## Initialization |
|
|
|
BoringSSL has some uncommon OS dependencies which are only used once to |
|
initialize some state. Sandboxes which drop privileges after some setup work may |
|
use `CRYPTO_pre_sandbox_init` to initialize this state ahead of time. Otherwise, |
|
callers must assume any BoringSSL function may depend on these resources, in |
|
addition to the operations above. |
|
|
|
### CPU capabilities |
|
|
|
On Linux ARM platforms, BoringSSL depends on OS APIs to query CPU capabilities. |
|
32-bit and 64-bit ARM both depend on the `getauxval` function. 32-bit ARM, to |
|
work around bugs in older Android devices, may additionally read |
|
`/proc/cpuinfo`. |
|
|
|
On 64-bit Apple ARM platforms, BoringSSL needs to query `hw.optional.*` sysctls. |
|
|
|
If querying CPU capabilities fails, BoringSSL will still function, but may not |
|
perform as well. |
|
|
|
### Entropy |
|
|
|
On Linux systems without a working `getrandom`, drawing entropy from the OS |
|
additionally requires opening `/dev/urandom`. If this fails, BoringSSL will |
|
abort the process. BoringSSL retains the resulting file descriptor, even across |
|
privilege transitions. |
|
|
|
### Fork protection |
|
|
|
On Linux, BoringSSL allocates a page and calls `madvise` with `MADV_WIPEONFORK` |
|
to protect single-use state from `fork`. This operation must not crash, but if |
|
it fails, BoringSSL will use alternate fork-safety strategies, potentially at a |
|
performance cost. If it succeeds, BoringSSL assumes `MADV_WIPEONFORK` is |
|
functional and relies on it for fork-safety. Sandboxes must not report success |
|
if they ignore the `MADV_WIPEONFORK` flag. As of writing, QEMU will ignore |
|
`madvise` calls and report success, so BoringSSL detects this by calling |
|
`madvise` with -1. Sandboxes must cleanly report an error instead of crashing. |
|
|
|
Once initialized, this mechanism does not require system calls in the steady |
|
state, though note the configured page will be inherited across privilege |
|
transitions. |
|
|
|
## C and C++ standard library |
|
|
|
BoringSSL depends on the C and C++ standard libraries which, themselves, do not |
|
make any guarantees about sandboxes. If it produces the correct answer and has |
|
no observable invalid side effects, it is possible, though unreasonable, for |
|
`memcmp` to create and close a socket. |
|
|
|
BoringSSL assumes that functions in the C and C++ library only have the platform |
|
dependencies which would be "reasonable". For instance, a function in BoringSSL |
|
which aims not to open files will still freely call any libc memory and |
|
string functions. |
|
|
|
Note some C functions, such as `strerror`, may read files relating to the user's |
|
locale. BoringSSL may trigger these paths and assumes the sandbox environment |
|
will tolerate this. BoringSSL additionally cannot make guarantees about which |
|
system calls are used by standard library's syscall wrappers. In some cases, the |
|
compiler may add dependencies. (Some C++ language features emit locking code.) |
|
Syscall-filtering sandboxes may need updates as these dependencies change.
|
|
|