Difference between revisions of "Exploit Methods/Userspace data usage"
		
		
		
		
		
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| Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
! Feature Name  | ! Feature Name  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
|rowspan="  | |rowspan="3"| ARM  | ||
| v7 32-bit   | | v7 32-bit  | ||
| CONFIG_CPU_SW_DOMAIN_PAN  | | CONFIG_CPU_SW_DOMAIN_PAN  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
|   | | v8.0  | ||
| future: CONFIG_ARM64_SW_TTBR0_PAN ([http://www.openwall.com/lists/kernel-hardening/2016/09/13/3 Catalin's series])  | | future: CONFIG_ARM64_SW_TTBR0_PAN ([http://www.openwall.com/lists/kernel-hardening/2016/09/13/3 Catalin's series])  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
| v8.1 (since December 2014)  | | v8.1 (since December 2014)  | ||
Revision as of 03:47, 15 September 2016
Details
Sometimes an attacker won't be able to control the instruction pointer directly, but they will be able to redirect the dereference a structure or other pointer. In these cases, it is easiest to aim at malicious structures that have been built in userspace to perform the exploitation.
Note that this is a superset that includes Userspace execution. If we can protect against userspace access, we'll also be protecting against userspace execution.
Examples
Mitigations
- hardware segmentation: SMAP (x86), PAN (arm, arm64), Domains (arm)
 - emulated PAN (memory segmentation via segments, Domains, page table swapping, PCID, etc. e.g. PAX_MEMORY_UDEREF)
 
Right now, the upstream options available for Privileged Access Never (PAN) are:
| CPU | Feature Name | |
|---|---|---|
| ARM | v7 32-bit | CONFIG_CPU_SW_DOMAIN_PAN | 
| v8.0 | future: CONFIG_ARM64_SW_TTBR0_PAN (Catalin's series) | |
| v8.1 (since December 2014) | hardware PAN | |
| x86 | pre-late-Broadwell | nothing | 
| Broadwell+ (since October 2014) | hardware PAN (SMAP) | |
| s/390 | hardware PAN (Address Spaces) | |
| powerpc | nothing? | |
| MIPS | nothing (could use ASID switching?) | |