[Bug 1641243] Re: Provide full AppArmor confinement for snaps on 14.04

Timo Aaltonen tjaalton at ubuntu.com
Fri Dec 9 11:20:23 UTC 2016


Hello Tyler, or anyone else affected,

Accepted apparmor into trusty-proposed. The package will build now and
be available at
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/apparmor/2.10.95-0ubuntu2.5~14.04.1
in a few hours, and then in the -proposed repository.

Please help us by testing this new package.  See
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Testing/EnableProposed for documentation on how
to enable and use -proposed.Your feedback will aid us getting this
update out to other Ubuntu users.

If this package fixes the bug for you, please add a comment to this bug,
mentioning the version of the package you tested, and change the tag
from verification-needed to verification-done. If it does not fix the
bug for you, please add a comment stating that, and change the tag to
verification-failed.  In either case, details of your testing will help
us make a better decision.

Further information regarding the verification process can be found at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QATeam/PerformingSRUVerification .  Thank you in
advance!

** Changed in: apparmor (Ubuntu Trusty)
       Status: In Progress => Fix Committed

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1641243

Title:
  Provide full AppArmor confinement for snaps on 14.04

Status in apparmor package in Ubuntu:
  Invalid
Status in dbus package in Ubuntu:
  Invalid
Status in apparmor source package in Trusty:
  Fix Committed
Status in dbus source package in Trusty:
  Fix Committed

Bug description:
  = apparmor SRU =
  [Rationale]
  For backporting snapd to 14.04 LTS, we need to provide proper AppArmor confinement for snaps when running under the 16.04 hardware enablement kernel. The apparmor userspace package in 14.04 is missing support key mediation features such as UNIX domain socket rules, AppArmor policy namespaces, and AppArmor profile stacking. UNIX domain socket mediation is needed by nearly all snaps. AppArmor policy namespaces and profile stacking are needed by the lxd snap.

  Unfortunately, it was not feasible to backport the individual features
  to the 14.04 apparmor package as they're quite complex and have a
  large number of dependency patches. Additionally, the AppArmor policy
  abstractions from Ubuntu 16.04 are needed to provide proper snap
  confinement. Because of these two reasons, the decision to bring
  16.04's apparmor package to 14.04 was (very carefully) made.

  [Test Case]

    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Process/Merges/TestPlans/AppArmor

  This update will go through the Test Plan as well as manual testing to
  verify that snap confinement on 14.04 does work. Manual tests include
  installing snapd in 14.04 and running simple snaps such as pwgen-
  tyhicks and hello-world, as well as a much more complex snap such as
  lxd.

  The following regression tests from lp:qa-regression-testing (these
  packages ship an AppArmor profile) can be used to verify that their
  respective packages do not regress:

   test-apache2-mpm-event.py
   test-apache2-mpm-itk.py
   test-apache2-mpm-perchild.py
   test-apache2-mpm-prefork.py
   test-apache2-mpm-worker.py
   test-bind9.py
   test-clamav.py
   test-cups.py
   test-dhcp.py
   test-mysql.py
   test-ntp.py
   test-openldap.py
   test-rsyslog.py
   test-squid.py
   test-strongswan.py
   test-tcpdump.py

  I have a branch of lp:qa-regression-testing (unmerged, currently at
  https://code.launchpad.net/~tyhicks/+git/qa-regression-testing/+ref
  /apparmor-trusty-sru) that pulls in the parser and regression tests
  from the apparmor 2.8.95~2430-0ubuntu5.3 package currently shipping in
  Trusty, in addition to the tests in the 2.10.95 based package.

  Additionally, manually testing evince, which is confined by an
  AppArmor profile, should be done. The manual test should check basic
  functionality as well as for proper confinement (`ps auxZ` output).

  [Regression Potential]
  High. We must be extremely careful to not regress existing, confined applications in Ubuntu 14.04. We are lucky that the upstream AppArmor project has extensive regression tests and that the Ubuntu Security team adds even more testing via the AppArmor Test Plan.

  Care was taken to minimally change how the AppArmor policies are
  loaded during the boot process. I also verified that the abstractions
  shipped in apparmor and the profiles shipped in apparmor-profiles are
  the same across this SRU update.

  = dbus SRU =
  [Rationale]
  For backporting snapd to 14.04 LTS, we need to provide proper D-Bus mediation for snaps when running under the 16.04 hardware enablement kernel. The dbus package in 14.04 is missing support for blocking unrequested reply messages. This functionality was added to the D-Bus AppArmor mediation patches after 14.04 was released but before the patches were merged upstream in dbus. The idea is to prevent a malicious snap from attacking another snap, over D-Bus, with unrequested reply messages and also to prevent two connections from subverting the snap confinement by communicating via unrequested reply messages.

  [Test Case]

  The upstream AppArmor userspace project has thorough tests for D-Bus
  mediation, including unrequested replies. Its
  tests/regression/apparmor/dbus_*.sh tests should be ran before and
  after updating to the dbus SRU. Before updating, the
  dbus_unrequested_reply.sh should fail and should pass after updating.

  To run the dbus_*.sh tests:

  $ sudo apt-get install -y bzr libdbus-1-dev
  $ bzr branch lp:apparmor # apt-get source apparmor to test the current apparmor
  $ cd apparmor/tests/regression/apparmor/
  $ make USE_SYSTEM=1 \
    dbus_{eavesdrop,message,service,unrequested_reply} uservars.inc
  $ for t in dbus_{eavesdrop,message,service,unrequested_reply}.sh; \
    do sudo VERBOSE=1 bash $t || break; done

  The exit code should be 0 and all output lines should start with
  "ok:".

  In addition, the test-dbus.py tests from lp:qa-regression-testing
  should be ran to verify basic D-Bus functionality.

  This update will go through the Test Plan as well as manual testing to
  verify that snap confinement on 14.04 does work. Manual tests include
  installing snapd in 14.04 and running simple snaps such as pwgen-
  tyhicks and hello-world, as well as a much more complex snap such as
  lxd.

  [Regression Potential]
  Low. There's no use for unrequested D-Bus reply messages and silently dropping them for AppArmor confined applications should have no unintended side effects. The unrequested reply protections have been present in releases after 14.04 and have not caused any issues.

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