48 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.4 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			48 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.4 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| NetLabel Linux Security Module Interface
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| ==============================================================================
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| Paul Moore, paul.moore@hp.com
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| 
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| May 17, 2006
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| 
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|  * Overview
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| 
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| NetLabel is a mechanism which can set and retrieve security attributes from
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| network packets.  It is intended to be used by LSM developers who want to make
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| use of a common code base for several different packet labeling protocols.
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| The NetLabel security module API is defined in 'include/net/netlabel.h' but a
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| brief overview is given below.
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| 
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|  * NetLabel Security Attributes
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| 
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| Since NetLabel supports multiple different packet labeling protocols and LSMs
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| it uses the concept of security attributes to refer to the packet's security
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| labels.  The NetLabel security attributes are defined by the
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| 'netlbl_lsm_secattr' structure in the NetLabel header file.  Internally the
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| NetLabel subsystem converts the security attributes to and from the correct
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| low-level packet label depending on the NetLabel build time and run time
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| configuration.  It is up to the LSM developer to translate the NetLabel
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| security attributes into whatever security identifiers are in use for their
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| particular LSM.
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| 
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|  * NetLabel LSM Protocol Operations
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| 
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| These are the functions which allow the LSM developer to manipulate the labels
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| on outgoing packets as well as read the labels on incoming packets.  Functions
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| exist to operate both on sockets as well as the sk_buffs directly.  These high
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| level functions are translated into low level protocol operations based on how
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| the administrator has configured the NetLabel subsystem.
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| 
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|  * NetLabel Label Mapping Cache Operations
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| 
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| Depending on the exact configuration, translation between the network packet
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| label and the internal LSM security identifier can be time consuming.  The
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| NetLabel label mapping cache is a caching mechanism which can be used to
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| sidestep much of this overhead once a mapping has been established.  Once the
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| LSM has received a packet, used NetLabel to decode it's security attributes,
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| and translated the security attributes into a LSM internal identifier the LSM
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| can use the NetLabel caching functions to associate the LSM internal
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| identifier with the network packet's label.  This means that in the future
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| when a incoming packet matches a cached value not only are the internal
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| NetLabel translation mechanisms bypassed but the LSM translation mechanisms are
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| bypassed as well which should result in a significant reduction in overhead.
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