If the old flags are given as str (or None), call split_flags() to
convert them to a list.
This allows to simplify change_profile_flags() which now doesn't need to
call split_flags() on its own.
Also add some tests with a str for the old flags
parse_profile_start(): Error out on nested child profiles
See merge request apparmor/apparmor!136
Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com> for 2.10..master
use serialize_profile() for the new profile in (V)iew Changes
See merge request apparmor/apparmor!131
Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
The tools can't handle nested child profiles yet. Instead of failing
in funny[tm] ways (parse_profile_start() only returned the first two
segments of the profile name) better error out with a clear message.
These tests verify that
- _is_equal_aare() really raises an exception when it sees an invalid
combination of other_value and other_all
- BaseRuleset.__repr__() works as expected
As a side effect, this commit pushes the test coverage of
apparmor/rule/__init__.py to 100% ;-)
This is needed to get a reproducible output.
Also adjust the tests in test-profile-storage.py and add some example
variable to cleanprof.in and cleanprof.out
If a log line contains a denial for a child profile, log_dict will
(obviously) only contain the child profile. However, serialize_profile()
expects that the parent profile is also initialized as ProfileStorage.
This patch makes sure the parent profile gets initialized.
It also removes 26 of the 37 reasons in the TODO note in aa.py :-)
ProfileStorage() stores the content of a profile, so it makes sense to
also have the functions to write those rules (including helper functions
used by these functions) in the same file.
Note that I only moved the functions for rule types that are not handled
by *Ruleset classes.
The functions for writing rules stored in a *Ruleset class will
hopefully be superfluous sooner or later (probably later because
serialize_parse_profile_start() depends on them, and rewriting it won't
be easy)
Also move the test for var_transform() to test-profile-storage.py.
Merge remote-tracking branch 'cboltz/cboltz-fix-write-alias' from
Christian Boltz.
Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Steve Beattie <steve@nxnw.org>
PR: https://gitlab.com/apparmor/apparmor/merge_requests/119
write_pair() ignored the 'tail' parameter, which resulted in writing
invalid alias rules (without the trailing comma).
Also add an alias to test/cleanprof.* to ensure it doesn't break again.
test-libapparmor-test_multi.py converts the libapparmor test_multi log
examples to profiles.
This patch allows to call test-libapparmor-test-multi.py with a logfile
(containing a single log line) as parameter. It will then print the
resulting profile.
Example:
# python3 test-libapparmor-test_multi.py /path/to/libraries/libapparmor/testsuite/test_multi/testcase_dbus_01.in
/tmp/apparmor-2.8.0/tests/regression/apparmor/dbus_service {
dbus send bus=session path=/org/freedesktop/DBus interface=org.freedesktop.DBus member=Hello peer=(label=unconfined),
}
Writing a "link subset" rule missed a space, which resulted in something
like
link subset/foo -> /bar,
Also add a test rule to tests/cleanprof.* to ensure this doesn't break
again.
This excludes the /etc/apparmor.d/cache.d/ directory from aa-logprof
parsing because parsing the binary cache, well, takes a while :-/
Reported on the opensuse-factory mailinglist by Frank Krüger and
confirmed by others.
The tools don't support having multiple rules in one line (they expect
\n after each rule), therefore mark some of the bare_include_tests as
known failures.
For now we only allow quoted absolute paths without spaces in the name
due to:
- 1738877: include rules don't handle files with spaces in the name
- 1738879: include rules don't handle absolute paths without quotes in
some versions of parser
- 1738880: include rules don't handle relative paths in some versions of
the parser
- extend available_buttons() to display an "owner permissions on/off"
button if the rule supports it
- extend ask_the_questions() to handle these buttons
- add some tests to test-translations.py to avoid hotkey conflicts with
the newly added buttons
- move the code of set_options_audit_mode() to a new function
set_options_mode() and make set_options_audit_mode() a wrapper for it.
- add set_options_owner_mode() as another wrapper for set_options_mode()
and add code to switch the owner flag to set_options_mode()
- add tests for set_options_owner_mode()
logparser.py failed to notice if file events are owner-only in modern
audit.log (using fsuid=... and ouid=...).
This patch adds a comparison of fsuid and ouid and marks file events
as 'owner' if they match.
Note that log events without fsuid=... or ouid=... will have
18446744073709551615 as fsuid / ouid value (that's 2^64 - 1).
'None' would clearly be better ;-)
References: https://bugs.launchpad.net/apparmor/+bug/1538340
Exit rather than returning from shell snippets in Makefiles. It is
reported that returning causes the following error message with bash:
/bin/sh: line 4: return: can only `return' from a function or sourced script
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Reported-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
The test-aa-easyprof.py script relies on the parser to be built so the
check target of the utils/test/Makefile should detect if the parser
exists before running any tests.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Reported-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
This parameter is always [], so we can simplify the ReadLog __init__()
parameters.
Note that some tests handed over '' instead of []. This was a bug, but
didn't matter because those tests only use a small portion of ReadLog.
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
get_file_perms() and propose_file_rules() happily collect all file
permissions. This could lead to proposing 'wa' permissions in
aa-logprof, which then errored out because of conflicting permissions.
This patch adds a check to both functions that removes 'a' if 'w' is
present, and extends the tests to check this.
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com> for trunk and 2.11.
Note: Both functions (including this bug) were introduced together with
FileRule, so older releases are not affected.
Move ProfileStorage() from aa.py to the new profile_storage.py and make
it a class. The variable name in __init__() changes (profile -> self.data),
but the content stays the same.
The ProfileStorage class acts like a dict(), but has some additional
checks for unknown keys in place.
Also add some tests to make sure unknown keys really raise an exception.
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
(garbage) ptrace events like
... apparmor="DENIED" operation="ptrace" profile="/bin/netstat" pid=1962 comm="netstat" target=""
cause an empty name2 field, which leads to a crash in the tools.
This patch lets logparser.py ignore such garbage log events, which also
avoids the crash.
As usual, add some testcases.
test-libapparmor-test_multi.py needs some special handling to ignore the
empty name2 field in one of the testcases.
References: https://bugs.launchpad.net/apparmor/+bug/1689667
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com> for trunk and 2.11.
Older releases can't handle ptrace log events and therefore can't crash ;-)
Since r3634, the tools allow any order of dbus conditionals.
Quoting the r3634 patch description:
This patch eases the restriction on the ordering at the expense of the
utils no longer being able to detect and reject a single attribute that
is repeated multiple times. In that situation, only the last occurrence
of the attribute will be honored by the utils.
It seems nobody tested with all test profiles generated ;-) so we have to
add some exceptions to the "does not raise an exception" list now.
Acked-by <timeout> for trunk and 2.11
FileRule understands leading permissions, so the reason to skip those
(generated) test profiles in test-parser-simple-tests.py is gone.
However, the gen-xtrans.pl script generates profiles with a not-so-valid
mix of uppercase and lowercase, for example "Pux" and "Cux". The parser
accepts this, but the tools complain about such rules. Therefore add the
affected profiles to the exception list.
In total, this means we now test 319 of the 380 generated_perms_leading
test profiles.
The patch also moves some lines around to get the \-escaped profiles
out of the mixed uppercase/lowercase exec rule section.
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
The test-aa-easyprof.py script was attempting to do its own special
setup to import the in-tree easyprof module. However, this proved to be
very flaky and resulted in the test periodically failing due to an
AttributeError the first time easyprof.parse_args() was called.
This patch removes the flakiness by trusting that PYTHONPATH is set up
appropriately before the test script is ran. PYTHONPATH is already
initialized appropriately by utils/test/Makefile according to the
USE_SYSTEM make variable.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
if USE_SYSTEM is not set, the utils make check target will instruct
test-aa-easyprof.py to provide the path of the in-tree parser executable
to aa-easyprof.
If USE_SYSTEM is set, the default parser path (/sbin/apparmor_parser or
the result of `which apparmor_parser`) is used.
The test-aa-easyprof.py script receives the parser path by checking the
__AA_PARSER environment variable. This environment variable is strictly
used by the test script and not any user-facing code so two leading
underscores were used.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
If USE_SYSTEM is not set, the utils make check target will instruct
test-aa-easyprof.py to provide the path of the in-tree
profiles/apparmor.d directory to aa-easyprof as the parser base
directory.
If USE_SYSTEM is set, the default base directory (/etc/apparmor.d) is
used.
The test-aa-easyprof.py script receives the base path by checking the
__AA_BASEDIR environment variable. This environment variable is strictly
used by the test script and not any user-facing code so two leading
underscores were used.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
Bug: https://launchpad.net/bugs/1538306
https://launchpad.net/bugs/1521031
aa-easyprof accepts a list of abstractions to include and, by default,
execs apparmor_parser to verify the generated profile including any
abstractions. However, aa-easyprof didn't provide the same flexibility
as apparmor_parser when it came to where in the filesystem the
abstraction files could exist.
The parser supports --base (defaulting to /etc/apparmor.d) and --Include
(defaulting to unset) options to specify the search paths for
abstraction files. This patch adds the same options to aa-easyprof to
aide in two different situations:
1) Some Ubuntu packages use aa-easyprof to generate AppArmor profiles
at build time. Something that has been previously needed is a way
for those packages to ship their own abstractions file(s) that are
#included in the easyprof-generated profile. That's not been
possible since the abstraction file(s) have not yet been installed
during the package build.
2) The test-aa-easyprof.py script contains some tests that specify
abstractions that should be #included. Without the ability to
specify a different --base or --Include directory, the abstractions
were required to be present in /etc/apparmor.d/abstractions/ or the
tests would fail. This prevents the Python utils from being able to
strictly test against in-tree code/profiles/etc.
I don't like the names of the command line options --base and --Include.
They're not particularly descriptive and the capital 'I' is not user
friendly. However, I decided to preserve the name of the options from
apparmor_parser.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>