Files
runc/libcontainer/cgroups/devices/systemd.go
T
Kir Kolyshkin b6967fa84c Decouple cgroup devices handling
This commit separates the functionality of setting cgroup device
rules out of libct/cgroups to libct/cgroups/devices package. This
package, if imported, sets the function variables in libct/cgroups and
libct/cgroups/systemd, so that a cgroup manager can use those to manage
devices. If those function variables are nil (when libct/cgroups/devices
are not imported), a cgroup manager returns the ErrDevicesUnsupported
in case any device rules are set in Resources.

It also consolidates the code from libct/cgroups/ebpf and
libct/cgroups/ebpf/devicefilter into libct/cgroups/devices.

Moved some tests in libct/cg/sd that require device management to
libct/sd/devices.

Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
2022-05-18 11:17:08 -07:00

234 lines
7.1 KiB
Go

package devices
import (
"bufio"
"errors"
"fmt"
"os"
"strings"
systemdDbus "github.com/coreos/go-systemd/v22/dbus"
"github.com/godbus/dbus/v5"
"github.com/sirupsen/logrus"
"github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontainer/configs"
"github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontainer/devices"
)
// systemdProperties takes the configured device rules and generates a
// corresponding set of systemd properties to configure the devices correctly.
func systemdProperties(r *configs.Resources) ([]systemdDbus.Property, error) {
if r.SkipDevices {
return nil, nil
}
properties := []systemdDbus.Property{
// Always run in the strictest white-list mode.
newProp("DevicePolicy", "strict"),
// Empty the DeviceAllow array before filling it.
newProp("DeviceAllow", []deviceAllowEntry{}),
}
// Figure out the set of rules.
configEmu := Emulator{}
for _, rule := range r.Devices {
if err := configEmu.Apply(*rule); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("unable to apply rule for systemd: %w", err)
}
}
// systemd doesn't support blacklists. So we log a warning, and tell
// systemd to act as a deny-all whitelist. This ruleset will be replaced
// with our normal fallback code. This may result in spurious errors, but
// the only other option is to error out here.
if configEmu.IsBlacklist() {
// However, if we're dealing with an allow-all rule then we can do it.
if configEmu.IsAllowAll() {
return allowAllDevices(), nil
}
logrus.Warn("systemd doesn't support blacklist device rules -- applying temporary deny-all rule")
return properties, nil
}
// Now generate the set of rules we actually need to apply. Unlike the
// normal devices cgroup, in "strict" mode systemd defaults to a deny-all
// whitelist which is the default for devices.Emulator.
finalRules, err := configEmu.Rules()
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("unable to get simplified rules for systemd: %w", err)
}
var deviceAllowList []deviceAllowEntry
for _, rule := range finalRules {
if !rule.Allow {
// Should never happen.
return nil, fmt.Errorf("[internal error] cannot add deny rule to systemd DeviceAllow list: %v", *rule)
}
switch rule.Type {
case devices.BlockDevice, devices.CharDevice:
default:
// Should never happen.
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid device type for DeviceAllow: %v", rule.Type)
}
entry := deviceAllowEntry{
Perms: string(rule.Permissions),
}
// systemd has a fairly odd (though understandable) syntax here, and
// because of the OCI configuration format we have to do quite a bit of
// trickery to convert things:
//
// * Concrete rules with non-wildcard major/minor numbers have to use
// /dev/{block,char} paths. This is slightly odd because it means
// that we cannot add whitelist rules for devices that don't exist,
// but there's not too much we can do about that.
//
// However, path globbing is not support for path-based rules so we
// need to handle wildcards in some other manner.
//
// * Wildcard-minor rules have to specify a "device group name" (the
// second column in /proc/devices).
//
// * Wildcard (major and minor) rules can just specify a glob with the
// type ("char-*" or "block-*").
//
// The only type of rule we can't handle is wildcard-major rules, and
// so we'll give a warning in that case (note that the fallback code
// will insert any rules systemd couldn't handle). What amazing fun.
if rule.Major == devices.Wildcard {
// "_ *:n _" rules aren't supported by systemd.
if rule.Minor != devices.Wildcard {
logrus.Warnf("systemd doesn't support '*:n' device rules -- temporarily ignoring rule: %v", *rule)
continue
}
// "_ *:* _" rules just wildcard everything.
prefix, err := groupPrefix(rule.Type)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
entry.Path = prefix + "*"
} else if rule.Minor == devices.Wildcard {
// "_ n:* _" rules require a device group from /proc/devices.
group, err := findDeviceGroup(rule.Type, rule.Major)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("unable to find device '%v/%d': %w", rule.Type, rule.Major, err)
}
if group == "" {
// Couldn't find a group.
logrus.Warnf("could not find device group for '%v/%d' in /proc/devices -- temporarily ignoring rule: %v", rule.Type, rule.Major, *rule)
continue
}
entry.Path = group
} else {
// "_ n:m _" rules are just a path in /dev/{block,char}/.
switch rule.Type {
case devices.BlockDevice:
entry.Path = fmt.Sprintf("/dev/block/%d:%d", rule.Major, rule.Minor)
case devices.CharDevice:
entry.Path = fmt.Sprintf("/dev/char/%d:%d", rule.Major, rule.Minor)
}
}
deviceAllowList = append(deviceAllowList, entry)
}
properties = append(properties, newProp("DeviceAllow", deviceAllowList))
return properties, nil
}
func newProp(name string, units interface{}) systemdDbus.Property {
return systemdDbus.Property{
Name: name,
Value: dbus.MakeVariant(units),
}
}
func groupPrefix(ruleType devices.Type) (string, error) {
switch ruleType {
case devices.BlockDevice:
return "block-", nil
case devices.CharDevice:
return "char-", nil
default:
return "", fmt.Errorf("device type %v has no group prefix", ruleType)
}
}
// findDeviceGroup tries to find the device group name (as listed in
// /proc/devices) with the type prefixed as required for DeviceAllow, for a
// given (type, major) combination. If more than one device group exists, an
// arbitrary one is chosen.
func findDeviceGroup(ruleType devices.Type, ruleMajor int64) (string, error) {
fh, err := os.Open("/proc/devices")
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
defer fh.Close()
prefix, err := groupPrefix(ruleType)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
scanner := bufio.NewScanner(fh)
var currentType devices.Type
for scanner.Scan() {
// We need to strip spaces because the first number is column-aligned.
line := strings.TrimSpace(scanner.Text())
// Handle the "header" lines.
switch line {
case "Block devices:":
currentType = devices.BlockDevice
continue
case "Character devices:":
currentType = devices.CharDevice
continue
case "":
continue
}
// Skip lines unrelated to our type.
if currentType != ruleType {
continue
}
// Parse out the (major, name).
var (
currMajor int64
currName string
)
if n, err := fmt.Sscanf(line, "%d %s", &currMajor, &currName); err != nil || n != 2 {
if err == nil {
err = errors.New("wrong number of fields")
}
return "", fmt.Errorf("scan /proc/devices line %q: %w", line, err)
}
if currMajor == ruleMajor {
return prefix + currName, nil
}
}
if err := scanner.Err(); err != nil {
return "", fmt.Errorf("reading /proc/devices: %w", err)
}
// Couldn't find the device group.
return "", nil
}
// DeviceAllow is the dbus type "a(ss)" which means we need a struct
// to represent it in Go.
type deviceAllowEntry struct {
Path string
Perms string
}
func allowAllDevices() []systemdDbus.Property {
// Setting mode to auto and removing all DeviceAllow rules
// results in allowing access to all devices.
return []systemdDbus.Property{
newProp("DevicePolicy", "auto"),
newProp("DeviceAllow", []deviceAllowEntry{}),
}
}