xref: /freebsd/contrib/lib9p/genacl.h (revision e17f5b1d)
1 /*
2  * Copyright 2016 Chris Torek <torek@ixsystems.com>
3  * All rights reserved
4  *
5  * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6  * modification, are permitted providing that the following conditions
7  * are met:
8  * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10  * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12  *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13  *
14  * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
15  * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
16  * WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
17  * ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY
18  * DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
19  * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
20  * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
21  * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
22  * STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
23  * IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
24  * POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
25  */
26 
27 /*
28  * General ACL support for 9P2000.L.
29  *
30  * We mostly use Linux's xattr name space and nfs4 ACL bits, as
31  * these are the most general forms available.
32  *
33  * Linux requests attributes named
34  *
35  *     "system.posix_acl_default"
36  *     "system.posix_acl_access"
37  *
38  * to get POSIX style ACLs, and:
39  *
40  *     "system.nfs4_acl"
41  *
42  * to get NFSv4 style ACLs.  The v9fs client does not explicitly
43  * ask for the latter, but if you use the Ubuntu nfs4-acl-tools
44  * package, it should be able to read and write these.
45  *
46  * For the record, the Linux kernel source code also shows:
47  *
48  *  - Lustre uses "trusted.*", with "*" matching "lov", "lma",
49  *    "lmv", "dmv", "link", "fid", "version", "som", "hsm", and
50  *    "lfsck_namespace".
51  *
52  *  - ceph has a name tree of the form "ceph.<type>.<name>" with
53  *     <type,name> pairs like <"dir","entries">, <"dir","files>,
54  *     <"file","layout">, and so on.
55  *
56  *  - ext4 uses the POSIX names, plus some special ext4-specific
57  *    goop that might not get externalized.
58  *
59  *  - NFS uses both the POSIX names and the NFSv4 ACLs.  However,
60  *    what it mainly does is have nfsd generate fake NFSv4 ACLs
61  *    from POSIX ACLs.  If you run an NFS client, the client
62  *    relies on the server actually implementing the ACLs, and
63  *    lets nfs4-acl-tools read and write the system.nfs4_acl xattr
64  *    data.  If you run an NFS server off, e.g., an ext4 file system,
65  *    the server looks for the system.nfs4_acl xattr, serves that
66  *    out if found, and otherwise just generates the fakes.
67  *
68  *  - "security.*" and "selinux.*" are reserved.
69  *
70  *  - "security.capability" is the name for capabilities.
71  *
72  *  - sockets use "system.sockprotoname".
73  */
74 
75 #if defined(__APPLE__)
76   #define HAVE_POSIX_ACLS
77   #define HAVE_DARWIN_ACLS
78 #endif
79 
80 #if defined(__FreeBSD__)
81   #define HAVE_POSIX_ACLS
82   #define HAVE_FREEBSD_ACLS
83 #endif
84 
85 #include <sys/types.h>
86 #include <sys/acl.h>		/* XXX assumes existence of sys/acl.h */
87 
88 /*
89  * An ACL consists of a number of ACEs that grant some kind of
90  * "allow" or "deny" to some specific entity.
91  *
92  * The number of ACEs is potentially unlimited, although in practice
93  * they tend not to be that long.
94  *
95  * It's the responsibility of the back-end to supply the ACL
96  * for each test.  However, the ACL may be in some sort of
97  * system-specific form.  It's the responsibility of some
98  * (system-specific) code to translate it to *this* form, after
99  * which the backend may use l9p_acl_check_access() to get
100  * access granted or denied (and, eventually, audits and alarms
101  * recorded and raises, although that's yet to be designed).
102  *
103  * The reason for all this faffing-about with formats is so that
104  * we can *report* the ACLs using Linux 9p style xattrs.
105  */
106 
107 struct l9p_acl;
108 struct l9p_fid;
109 
110 void l9p_acl_free(struct l9p_acl *);
111 
112 /*
113  * An ACL is made up of ACEs.
114  *
115  * Each ACE has:
116  *
117  *   - a type: allow, deny, audit, alarm
118  *   - a set of flags
119  *   - permissions bits: a "mask"
120  *   - an optional, nominally-variable-length identity
121  *
122  * The last part is especially tricky and currently has limited
123  * support here: it's always a 16 byte field on Darwin, and just
124  * a uint32_t on BSD (should be larger, really).  Linux supports
125  * very large, actually-variable-size values; we'll deal with
126  * this later, maybe.
127  *
128  * We will define the mask first, below, since these are also the bits
129  * passed in for the accmask argument to l9p_acl_check_access().
130  */
131 
132 /*
133  * ACL entry mask, and accmask argument flags.
134  *
135  * NB: not every bit is implemented, but they are all here because
136  * they are all defined as part of an NFSv4 ACL entry, which is
137  * more or less a superset of a POSIX ACL entry.  This means you
138  * can put a complete NFSv4 ACL in and we can reproduce it.
139  *
140  * Note that the LIST_DIRECTORY, ADD_FILE, and ADD_SUBDIRECTORY bits
141  * apply only to a directory, while the READ_DATA, WRITE_DATA, and
142  * APPEND_DATA bits apply only to a file.  See aca_parent/aca_child
143  * below.
144  */
145 #define	L9P_ACE_READ_DATA		0x00001
146 #define	L9P_ACE_LIST_DIRECTORY		0x00001 /* same as READ_DATA */
147 #define	L9P_ACE_WRITE_DATA		0x00002
148 #define	L9P_ACE_ADD_FILE		0x00002 /* same as WRITE_DATA */
149 #define	L9P_ACE_APPEND_DATA		0x00004
150 #define	L9P_ACE_ADD_SUBDIRECTORY	0x00004 /* same as APPEND_DATA */
151 #define	L9P_ACE_READ_NAMED_ATTRS	0x00008
152 #define	L9P_ACE_WRITE_NAMED_ATTRS	0x00010
153 #define	L9P_ACE_EXECUTE			0x00020
154 #define	L9P_ACE_DELETE_CHILD		0x00040
155 #define	L9P_ACE_READ_ATTRIBUTES		0x00080
156 #define	L9P_ACE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES	0x00100
157 #define	L9P_ACE_WRITE_RETENTION		0x00200 /* not used here */
158 #define	L9P_ACE_WRITE_RETENTION_HOLD	0x00400 /* not used here */
159 /*					0x00800 unused? */
160 #define	L9P_ACE_DELETE			0x01000
161 #define	L9P_ACE_READ_ACL		0x02000
162 #define	L9P_ACE_WRITE_ACL		0x04000
163 #define	L9P_ACE_WRITE_OWNER		0x08000
164 #define	L9P_ACE_SYNCHRONIZE		0x10000 /* not used here */
165 
166 /*
167  * This is not an ACE bit, but is used with the access checking
168  * below.  It represents a request to unlink (delete child /
169  * delete) an entity, and is equivalent to asking for *either*
170  * (not both) permission.
171  */
172 #define	L9P_ACOP_UNLINK (L9P_ACE_DELETE_CHILD | L9P_ACE_DELETE)
173 
174 /*
175  * Access checking takes a lot of arguments, so they are
176  * collected into a "struct" here.
177  *
178  * The aca_parent and aca_pstat fields may/must be NULL if the
179  * operation itself does not involve "directory" permissions.
180  * The aca_child and aca_cstat fields may/must be NULL if the
181  * operation does not involve anything *but* a directory.  This
182  * is how we decide whether you're interested in L9P_ACE_READ_DATA
183  * vs L9P_ACE_LIST_DIRECTORY, for instance.
184  *
185  * Note that it's OK for both parent and child to be directories
186  * (as is the case when we're adding or deleting a subdirectory).
187  */
188 struct l9p_acl_check_args {
189 	uid_t	aca_uid;		/* the uid that is requesting access */
190 	gid_t	aca_gid;		/* the gid that is requesting access */
191 	gid_t	*aca_groups;		/* the additional group-set, if any */
192 	size_t	aca_ngroups;		/* number of groups in group-set */
193 	struct l9p_acl *aca_parent;	/* ACLs associated with parent/dir */
194 	struct stat *aca_pstat;		/* stat data for parent/dir */
195 	struct l9p_acl *aca_child;	/* ACLs associated with file */
196 	struct stat *aca_cstat;		/* stat data for file */
197 	int	aca_aclmode;		/* mode checking bits, see below */
198 	bool	aca_superuser;		/* alway allow uid==0 in STAT_MODE */
199 };
200 
201 /*
202  * Access checking mode bits in aca_checkmode.  If you enable
203  * ACLs, they are used first, optionally with ZFS style ACLs.
204  * This means that even if aca_superuser is set, if an ACL denies
205  * permission to uid 0, permission is really denied.
206  *
207  * NFS style ACLs run before POSIX style ACLs (though POSIX
208  * ACLs aren't done yet anyway).
209  *
210  * N.B.: you probably want L9P_ACL_ZFS, especially when operating
211  * with a ZFS file system on FreeBSD.
212  */
213 #define	L9P_ACM_NFS_ACL		0x0001	/* enable NFS ACL checking */
214 #define	L9P_ACM_ZFS_ACL		0x0002	/* use ZFS ACL unlink semantics */
215 #define	L9P_ACM_POSIX_ACL	0x0004	/* enable POSIX ACL checking (notyet) */
216 #define	L9P_ACM_STAT_MODE	0x0008	/* enable st_mode bits */
217 
218 /*
219  * Requests to access some file or directory must provide:
220  *
221  *  - An operation.  This should usually be just one bit from the
222  *    L9P_ACE_* bit-sets above, or our special L9P_ACOP_UNLINK.
223  *    For a few file-open operations it may be multiple bits,
224  *    e.g., both read and write data.
225  *  - The identity of the accessor: uid + gid + gid-set.
226  *  - The type of access desired: this may be multiple bits.
227  *  - The parent directory, if applicable.
228  *  - The child file/dir being accessed, if applicable.
229  *  - stat data for parent and/or child, if applicable.
230  *
231  * The ACLs and/or stat data of the parent and/or child get used
232  * here, so the caller must provide them.  We should have a way to
233  * cache these on fids, but not yet.  The parent and child
234  * arguments are a bit tricky; see the code in genacl.c.
235  */
236 int l9p_acl_check_access(int32_t op, struct l9p_acl_check_args *args);
237 
238 /*
239  * When falling back to POSIX ACL or Unix-style permissions
240  * testing, it's nice to collapse the above detailed permissions
241  * into simple read/write/execute bits (value 0..7).  We provide
242  * a small utility function that does this.
243  */
244 int l9p_ace_mask_to_rwx(int32_t);
245 
246 /*
247  * The rest of the data in an ACE.
248  */
249 
250 /* type in ace_type */
251 #define	L9P_ACET_ACCESS_ALLOWED		0
252 #define	L9P_ACET_ACCESS_DENIED		1
253 #define	L9P_ACET_SYSTEM_AUDIT		2
254 #define	L9P_ACET_SYSTEM_ALARM		3
255 
256 /* flags in ace_flags */
257 #define	L9P_ACEF_FILE_INHERIT_ACE		0x001
258 #define	L9P_ACEF_DIRECTORY_INHERIT_ACE		0x002
259 #define	L9P_ACEF_NO_PROPAGATE_INHERIT_ACE	0x004
260 #define	L9P_ACEF_INHERIT_ONLY_ACE		0x008
261 #define	L9P_ACEF_SUCCESSFUL_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG	0x010
262 #define	L9P_ACEF_FAILED_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG		0x020
263 #define	L9P_ACEF_IDENTIFIER_GROUP		0x040
264 #define	L9P_ACEF_OWNER				0x080
265 #define	L9P_ACEF_GROUP				0x100
266 #define	L9P_ACEF_EVERYONE			0x200
267 
268 #if defined(__APPLE__)
269 #  define L9P_ACE_IDSIZE 16 /* but, how do we map Darwin uuid? */
270 #else
271 #  define L9P_ACE_IDSIZE 4
272 #endif
273 
274 struct l9p_ace {
275 	uint16_t ace_type;		/* ACL entry type */
276 	uint16_t ace_flags;		/* ACL entry flags */
277 	uint32_t ace_mask;		/* ACL entry mask */
278 	uint32_t ace_idsize;		/* length of ace_idbytes */
279 	unsigned char ace_idbytes[L9P_ACE_IDSIZE];
280 };
281 
282 #define	L9P_ACLTYPE_NFSv4	1	/* currently the only valid type */
283 struct l9p_acl {
284 	uint32_t acl_acetype;		/* reserved for future expansion */
285 	uint32_t acl_nace;		/* number of occupied ACEs */
286 	uint32_t acl_aceasize;		/* actual size of ACE array */
287 	struct l9p_ace acl_aces[];	/* variable length ACE array */
288 };
289 
290 /*
291  * These are the system-specific converters.
292  *
293  * Right now the backend needs to just find BSD NFSv4 ACLs
294  * and convert them before each operation that needs to be
295  * tested.
296  */
297 #if defined(HAVE_DARWIN_ACLS)
298 struct l9p_acl *l9p_darwin_nfsv4acl_to_acl(acl_t acl);
299 #endif
300 
301 #if defined(HAVE_FREEBSD_ACLS)
302 struct l9p_acl *l9p_freebsd_nfsv4acl_to_acl(acl_t acl);
303 #endif
304 
305 #if defined(HAVE_POSIX_ACLS) && 0 /* not yet */
306 struct l9p_acl *l9p_posix_acl_to_acl(acl_t acl);
307 #endif
308