| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ===================== |
| Syscall User Dispatch |
| ===================== |
| |
| Background |
| ---------- |
| |
| Compatibility layers like Wine need a way to efficiently emulate system |
| calls of only a part of their process - the part that has the |
| incompatible code - while being able to execute native syscalls without |
| a high performance penalty on the native part of the process. Seccomp |
| falls short on this task, since it has limited support to efficiently |
| filter syscalls based on memory regions, and it doesn't support removing |
| filters. Therefore a new mechanism is necessary. |
| |
| Syscall User Dispatch brings the filtering of the syscall dispatcher |
| address back to userspace. The application is in control of a flip |
| switch, indicating the current personality of the process. A |
| multiple-personality application can then flip the switch without |
| invoking the kernel, when crossing the compatibility layer API |
| boundaries, to enable/disable the syscall redirection and execute |
| syscalls directly (disabled) or send them to be emulated in userspace |
| through a SIGSYS. |
| |
| The goal of this design is to provide very quick compatibility layer |
| boundary crosses, which is achieved by not executing a syscall to change |
| personality every time the compatibility layer executes. Instead, a |
| userspace memory region exposed to the kernel indicates the current |
| personality, and the application simply modifies that variable to |
| configure the mechanism. |
| |
| There is a relatively high cost associated with handling signals on most |
| architectures, like x86, but at least for Wine, syscalls issued by |
| native Windows code are currently not known to be a performance problem, |
| since they are quite rare, at least for modern gaming applications. |
| |
| Since this mechanism is designed to capture syscalls issued by |
| non-native applications, it must function on syscalls whose invocation |
| ABI is completely unexpected to Linux. Syscall User Dispatch, therefore |
| doesn't rely on any of the syscall ABI to make the filtering. It uses |
| only the syscall dispatcher address and the userspace key. |
| |
| As the ABI of these intercepted syscalls is unknown to Linux, these |
| syscalls are not instrumentable via ptrace or the syscall tracepoints. |
| |
| Interface |
| --------- |
| |
| A thread can setup this mechanism on supported kernels by executing the |
| following prctl: |
| |
| prctl(PR_SET_SYSCALL_USER_DISPATCH, <op>, <offset>, <length>, [selector]) |
| |
| <op> is either PR_SYS_DISPATCH_ON or PR_SYS_DISPATCH_OFF, to enable and |
| disable the mechanism globally for that thread. When |
| PR_SYS_DISPATCH_OFF is used, the other fields must be zero. |
| |
| [<offset>, <offset>+<length>) delimit a memory region interval |
| from which syscalls are always executed directly, regardless of the |
| userspace selector. This provides a fast path for the C library, which |
| includes the most common syscall dispatchers in the native code |
| applications, and also provides a way for the signal handler to return |
| without triggering a nested SIGSYS on (rt\_)sigreturn. Users of this |
| interface should make sure that at least the signal trampoline code is |
| included in this region. In addition, for syscalls that implement the |
| trampoline code on the vDSO, that trampoline is never intercepted. |
| |
| [selector] is a pointer to a char-sized region in the process memory |
| region, that provides a quick way to enable disable syscall redirection |
| thread-wide, without the need to invoke the kernel directly. selector |
| can be set to SYSCALL_DISPATCH_FILTER_ALLOW or SYSCALL_DISPATCH_FILTER_BLOCK. |
| Any other value should terminate the program with a SIGSYS. |
| |
| Security Notes |
| -------------- |
| |
| Syscall User Dispatch provides functionality for compatibility layers to |
| quickly capture system calls issued by a non-native part of the |
| application, while not impacting the Linux native regions of the |
| process. It is not a mechanism for sandboxing system calls, and it |
| should not be seen as a security mechanism, since it is trivial for a |
| malicious application to subvert the mechanism by jumping to an allowed |
| dispatcher region prior to executing the syscall, or to discover the |
| address and modify the selector value. If the use case requires any |
| kind of security sandboxing, Seccomp should be used instead. |
| |
| Any fork or exec of the existing process resets the mechanism to |
| PR_SYS_DISPATCH_OFF. |