N/AA. Deason
Internet-DraftM. Meffie
Intended status: ExperimentalT. Keiser
Expires: July 16, 2010Sine Nomine
 January 12, 2010


Methods of Specifying Restrictions on AFS3 ACLs
draft-deason-afs3-acl-restrictions-00

Abstract

The AFS-3 ACL 'a' bit gives users unfettered power to grant, or revoke, privileges, with no provision for enforcing site policy. This memo provides several alternative mechanisms for creating restrictions on what powers the 'a' bit denotes. Three alternative mechanisms for restricting the power of the 'a' bit are proposed: a method for overlaying the ACL with a site-controlled ACL; a method for masking the ACL with a site-controlled privilege mask; and a finely granular meta-acl mechanism for restricting to whom privileges may be delegated, and which privileges may be given to different classes of principals. This memo will serve as a basis for the ACL restriction discussion with the AFS-3 protocol working group. The intended goal of this discussion is to reach consensus on standardization of one or more solutions, and then publish a BCP status memo.

Status of this Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

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1.  Introduction

Currently sites may give users administrative rights on certain directories in AFS, such as home directories and shared project directories. Users should not, but can, give overly permissive ACLs to those directories. For example, a user could give write and even admin permissions to the system:anyuser group ('fs sa $HOME system:anyuser rlidwka').

This can which can lead to problematic situations, especially for directories that can be served over http. As it stands today, the only possible way for AFS administrators to prevent this (at least in OpenAFS) is to monitor the fileserver's audit log, and correct ACLs that are overly permissive. But this is suboptimal, and is an after-the-fact check.

If you see a viable solution to this problem not listed here, or see any problems with our methods, please let us know. Or if a solution to this problem is valuable to you or your organization, also please let us know.



1.1.  Requirements Language

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 (Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” March 1997.) [RFC2119].



2.  Proposed solutions

Discussions have shown that preventing this is not a simple issue, and that there are a few ways to go about it, each with advantages and disadvantages. Here we will outline 3 general approaches, and show how to use them to meet certain illustrative use cases.

Since the rest of this is quite long, here's a quick summary of the conclusions. We have three methods: 'method A' is the "volume-level ACL overlays" idea, 'method B' is the "volume ACL masks" idea, and 'method C' is the "volume ACL policies" idea. While none of these in themselves cover all corners of all possible use cases, we would probably implement either C by itself, or A and B together to cover a large enough majority of use cases. Of course, unless a serious problem is found, there is no reason to not implement all three.

The bottom line is that I find method C to be the most flexible and the least confusing to end-users, but it is the most confusing to administrators, and it is the slowest (when changing the volume-level permissions). Using methods A+B has the opposite pros/cons.

Here are the details. Each method has an explanation for what it generally is and how it works, followed by its use in a few simple use-case scenarios, followed by the pros/cons.



2.1.  Method A: volume-level ACL overlays

With this method, we maintain a single additional ACL in the volume metadata, which is applied to access checks in the volume after performing the per-directory ACL check. It can be thought of as similar to the OpenAFS fileserver's -implicit flag, but more generalized.

For example, if we wanted a volume where system:backups was guaranteed to have 'rl' rights, and system:evilusers was guaranteed to not have _any_ rights, the volume-level ACL overlay would look like this:


positive:
 system:backups rl
negative:
 system:evilusers rlidwka

Thus, any time an access check is done on an ACL anywhere in the volume: after we do the normal directory ACL check, we look at this volume-level ACL. If the accessing user is in system:backups, they will get rl rights, and if they are in system:evilusers, all of their rights will go away.



2.1.1.  How do I prevent system:anyuser/system:authuser write access?

To prevent system:anyuser from having write access, we will need to allow specifying the 'anonymous' user in the volume-level ACL, which refers only to unauthenticated accesses. Then, you just give negative write rights to the anonymous user. The command would look something like:


  vos setacl -vol user.adeason -acl anonymous idwka -neg

For system:authuser, you cannot prevent write access with this method. It is a limitation of this approach. (Giving system:authuser negative idwka rights would revoke those rights from _all_ authenticated users, which is probably not what you want to do.)



2.1.2.  How do I ensure nobody in group.foo gets write access?

Just grant negative idwka access to group.foo on the volume. Something like:


  vos setacl -vol user.adeason -acl group.foo idwka -neg

Members of group.foo will now not be able to write anything in the volume.



2.1.3.  How do I guarantee group.bar read access?

Same as above, just grant positive read rights. Something like:


  vos setacl -vol user.adeason -acl group.bar rl



2.1.4.  Method A advantages



2.1.5.  Method A disadvantages



2.2.  Method B: volume ACL masks

With this method, we maintain a mapping of users to a rights mask. Any time an ACL access check is performed, if a positive ACL entry matches a user in that table, the acquires rights are masked to the rights mask in the table.

For example, if we wanted to prevent users from giving away write access to system:anyuser, and prevent users from giving admin access to system:authuser, we could have a table like so:


system:anyuser rl
system:authuser rlidwk

So any time an ACL entry for system:anyuser appears, everything is treated as if the rights in that ACL entry were logically ANDed with 'rl'. So no user can gain more than 'rl' rights on a directory simply by being in system:anyuser.



2.2.1.  How do I prevent system:anyuser/system:authuser write access?

Set the rights mask for them to just 'rl'. Something like:


  vos setaclmask -vol user.adeason -user system:anyuser -mask rl

So any time an ACL entry for system:anyuser appears in the volume, everything will act as if the rights were limited to rl.



2.2.2.  How do I ensure nobody in group.foo gets write access?

You cannot _prevent_ access for an arbitrary group with this method, but you can make it harder to do accidentally. You can set the rights mask like so:


  vos setaclmask -vol user.adeason -user group.foo -mask rl

Which restricts any rights for group.foo on any ACL to be restricted to 'rl'. However, a user can intentionally work around this by simply placing group.foo in another group:


  pts creategroup adeason:foo
  pts adduser group.foo adeason:foo
  fs setacl $DIR adeason:foo rlidwka

Since group.foo itself never apears in the ACL, the ACL mask is bypassed.



2.2.3.  How do I guarantee group.bar read access?

You cannot. This method cannot grant additional rights.



2.2.4.  Method B advantages



2.2.5.  Method B disadvantages



2.3.  Method C: volume ACL policies

With this method, we maintain policies of who is allowed to set what ACLs in a volume. That is, unlike methods A and B, we perform additional access checks at SetACL time, not at the time when the files are accessed. We would have 4 volume-level ACLs that define what users are allowed to add positive rights ('add-positive'), remove positive rights ('remove-positive'), add negative rights ('add-negative'), and remove negative rights ('remove-negative').

For example, to allow nobody but system:powerusers to grant idwka rights to system:anyuser, we'd have a policy for system:anyuser that would look like this:


add-positive:
  system:powerusers rlidwka
  system:anyuser    rl

After that policy is set, any time a user not in system:powerusers tries to grant system:anyuser more than rl rights, they will get an EACCES error. This does not change the existing ACLs in the volume; an administrator will need to run an auditing tool to make sure that existing ACLs comply with the volume policy.



2.3.1.  How do I prevent system:anyuser/system:authuser write access?

You would call something like this


  vos setpolicy -add-positive \
    -user system:anyuser      \
    -set-rights rl            \
    -for-user system:anyuser  \
    -in-volume user.adeason

to prevent people from giving system:anyuser write access. To ensure that existing ACLs don't permit write access, you would need to run something like


  vos auditpolicy -vol user.adeason



2.3.2.  How do I ensure nobody in group.foo gets write access?

To prevent an arbitrary normal group from getting write access, things are slightly different. You would need to prevent users from taking away negative idwka rights, and then assign negative idwka rights to all directories in the volume. So, something like


 vos setpolicy -remove-negative \
   -user system:anyuser         \
   -set-rights rl               \
   -for-user group.foo          \
   -in-volume user.adeason

Would allow users to only remove 'rl' rights from group.foo in negative ACLs. Then you would need to set negative idwka ACLs on all directories in the volume.



2.3.3.  How do I guarantee group.bar read access?

Prevent normal users from taking away read access from group.bar, and from granting negative read access for group.bar:


 vos setpolicy -remove-positive \
   -user system:anyuser         \
   -set-rights idwka            \
   -for-user group.bar          \
   -in-volume user.adeason

 vos setpolicy -add-negative \
   -user system:anyuser      \
   -set-rights idwka         \
   -for-user group.bar       \
   -in-volume user.adeason

Then, grant read access for group.bar in all directories in the volume.



2.3.4.  Method C advantages



2.3.5.  Method C disadvantages



3.  Summary

As I mentioned, we could just do all of these, since they are potentially best suited to different scenarios. Either method C by itself or methods A and B together do seem to cover most of the immediately-apparent use cases, though. To summarize the general areas in which the different methods are better or worse:


                     Better     | Worse
                     ---------------------
flexibility:       : method C   | method A+B
end-user confusion : method C   | method A+B
end-admin confusion: method A+B | method C
policy-change speed: method A+B | method C

There are other pros and cons, but I think those areas are the only ones where it matters much. If you see any problems that aren't listed here, or if you particularly want one of the described methods, please let us know.



4.  Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Jim Rowan for discussing problematic interactions between the proposed ACL policy management techniques and PTS user-managed groups, and Jeffrey Altman for helping to better frame the problem statement and proposing alternative implementations.



5.  IANA Considerations

This memo includes no request to IANA.



6.  Security Considerations

The existing security model is known to be flawed. This draft attempts to improve the situation by limiting the extent to which end users can modify file system permissions. However, it is known that this is not sufficient to address all possible ACL attack vectors. Two key areas of concern are authorization for modification of policy metadata, and interaction with user-managed PTS groups.

How modification of policy data will be authorized in an environment using RBAC is not clear; it is known that system:administrators is not always the appropriate group of principals. In highly secured environments there may be a desire to restrict modification of policy to a security-related group, rather than the group responsible for maintaining the AFS server plant. This is not addressed in the memo, although it could be addressed by means of additional per-volume metadata.

There are proposed attack vectors by which a user-managed group can be used to get around ACL restrictions. While these attacks can bypass a naive ACL policy specification, it is possible to circumvent these techniques through the use of negative access control policy entries.



7. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997 (TXT, HTML, XML).


Authors' Addresses

  Andrew Deason
  Sine Nomine Associates
  43596 Blacksmith Square
  Ashburn, Virginia 20147-4606
  USA
Phone:  +1 703 723 6673
Email:  adeason@sinenomine.net
  
  Michael Meffie
  Sine Nomine Associates
  43596 Blacksmith Square
  Ashburn, Virginia 20147-4606
  USA
Phone:  +1 703 723 6673
Email:  mmeffie@sinenomine.net
  
  Thomas Keiser
  Sine Nomine Associates
  43596 Blacksmith Square
  Ashburn, Virginia 20147-4606
  USA
Phone:  +1 703 723 6673
Email:  tkeiser@sinenomine.net