I made the trip down to OmniTI headquarters just south of Baltimore, MD this Wednesday for BWPUG. This month's topic was the ongoing project to integrate SE-Linux with PostgreSQL. Besides myself, Stephen Frost, Greg Smith, Robert Treat were all there from the PostgreSQL community, along with David Quigley and Joshua Brindle from the SE-Linux community. It was a very productive meeting and I learned a lot about what the SE-Linux community is looking for from PostgreSQL.
We first discussed the current status of the project. Following discussions with Stephen Frost, KaiGai Kohei, and Greg Smith at PGCon 2010, I wrote and committed four patches which have, I think, helped to clear the way for an eventual loadable module implementing basic SE-Linux support for PostgreSQL; and I also committed a fifth patch by KaiGai Kohei. These were, in order of commit:
1. Add a hook in ExecCheckRTPerms(). This is just a very simple hook to allow a loadable module to gain control at the time DML relation permissions are checked. Whenever a SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement is invoked, this function gets a listed of the relation OIDs and can choose to allow the statement to proceed or throw an error. (It could also potentially do other things, like write to a log file, if that were useful for some reason.)
2. Centralize DML permissions-checking logic. KaiGai Kohei spotted the fact that the previous patch didn't actually work for a couple of important cases. In particular, COPY did not previously go through ExecCheckRTPerms(), and there is some hairy code inside the foreign key stuff that also needed adjustment to work properly with this hook. This patch, by KaiGai Kohei, cleaned all of that up. So as far as I know, we now have a single point for all DML permissions checking, and a hook function at that point. Yeah!
Unfortunately, in order to do label-based security, a simple hook function is not enough. You also need a place to store the labels, and ideally that place should be a PostgreSQL system catalog. I had initially thought that we would add a security label column to the system catalog for each object type, but that would require fairly invasive changes across the whole system and carry some minor performance penalty even for people who did not use it. At PGCon, we came up with the idea of storing all security labels for all objects in a separate catalog. Security labels are, in essence, just strings, which we don't try to interpret but which have some meaning (the details of which we need not understand) to an external security provider such as SE-Linux.
As luck would have it, we already have a model for such a facility: the COMMENT statement already knows how to store arbitrary strings which it does not attempt to interpret for arbitrary database objects, using a catalog (actually two catalogs) dedicated to that purpose. Unfortunately, the comment code is quite large, and, as it turned out, buggy, so it didn't seem like a good idea to copy-and-paste it into a new file and then hack it up from there, as I had initially hoped to do. So that led to three more patches.
3. Standardize get_whatever_oid functions for object types with unqualified names. As it turns out, one of the things that the comment code needed to do over and over again was examine the parse tree representation of an object and convert it to an OID by looking up the name in a system catalog. But there wasn't any standard way to do this, and in some cases the code was quite lengthy and already duplicated in multiple places throughout our source base. This patch cleaned that up, by introducing a standard API and adjusting the existing OID-getter functions, or adding new ones, for tablespaces, databases, roles, schemas, languages, and access methods, to conform to that API.
4. Standardize get_whatever_oid functions for other object types. More of the same, this time for text search parsers, dictionaries, templates, and configs; as well as for conversions, constraints, operator classes, operator families, rules, triggers, and casts.
5. Rewrite comment code for better modularity, and add necessary locking. This patch took the refactoring in the previous two patches one step further. The functions in the previous patches provide a way to translate a named object of a different type to an OID. This patch creates a more general API that can be passed an object type and a parse tree and return an ObjectAddress, which is an internal representation that can point to a database object of any type. The ObjectAddress representation is used for management of dependencies between database objects (e.g. you can't drop a table if there's a view using it, unless you also drop the view) as well as by the comment code, and they will be useful for security label support as well.
This new facility also fixes a longstanding locking bug in the COMMENT code, which still exists (and likely won't be fixed) in 9.0 and all prior releases. An object that is dropped concurrently with a COMMENT operation on that same object could lead to an orphaned comment in the pg_description or pg_shdescription catalog. If another object of the same type is subsequently assigned the same OID, it will inherit the orphaned comment. This is fairly unlikely and, for comments, fairly innocuous, but it would obviously create a potential security hole for security labels.
With these preliminary patches in place, I think we're now well-positioned to introduce the major piece of functionality which we will need to support SE-Linux integration: an in-core security label facility for use by SE-Linux and perhaps other label-based security systems. Stephen Frost, KaiGai Kohei, and I have had extensive discussions about the design of this facility and there are currently two pending patches by KaiGai Kohei which are intended to implement that design: one adds the basic security facility and commands for manually applying labels, and the other adds hooks at table creation time to allow enhanced security providers to automatically set a label on newly created tables. I have not yet reviewed these patches in detail, but I hope to see them committed - likely with some modifications - within the next month.
In the second part of this blog post, I'll go over what I learned from David and Joshua (who were extremely helpful in explaining SE-Linux to me), the additional facilities which they felt would be necessary for a minimally useful SE-Linux integration, and what they'd like to see over the longer term.
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