lio-0.9.2.2: Labeled IO Information Flow Control Library

Safe HaskellTrustworthy

LIO.Core

Contents

Description

This module implements the core of the Labeled IO (LIO) library for information flow control (IFC) in Haskell. It provides a monad, LIO, that is intended to be used as a replacement for the IO monad in untrusted code. The idea is for untrusted code to provide a computation in the LIO monad, which trusted code can then safely execute through using evalLIO-like functions. Though, usually a wrapper function is employed depending on the type of labels used by an application. For example, with LIO.DCLabel trusted code would evalDC to execute an untrusted computation.

Labels are a way of describing who can observe and modify data. (A detailed consideration of labels is given in LIO.Label.) LIO associates a current label with every LIO computation. The current label effectively tracks the sensitivity of all the data that the computation has observed. For example, if the computation has read a "secret" mutable refernce (see LIO.LIORef) and then the result of a "top-secret" thread (see LIO.Concurrent) then the current label will be at least "top-secret". The role of the current label is two-fold. First, the current label protects all the data in scope -- it is the label associated with any unlabeled data. For example, the current label is the label on contants such as 3 or "tis a string". More interestingly, consider reading a "secret" file:

 bs <- readFile "/secret/file.txt"

Though the label in the file store may be "secret", bs has type ByteString, which is not explicitly labeled. Hence, to protect the contents (bs) the current label must be at least "secret" before executing readFile. More generally, if the current label is L_cur, then it is only permissible to read data labeled L_r if L_r `canFlowTo` L_cur. Note that, rather than throw an exception, reading data will often just increase the current label to ensure that L_r `canFlowTo` L_cur using taint.

Second, the current label prevents inforation leaks into public channels. Specifically, it is only permissible to modify, or write to, data labeled L_w when L_cur`canFlowTo` L_w. Thus, it the following attempt to leak the secret bs would fail:

 writeFile "/public/file.txt" bs

In addition to the current label, the LIO monad keeps a second label, the current clearance (accessible via the getClearance function). The clearance can be used to enforce a "need-to-know" policy since it represents the highest value the current label can be raised to. In other words, if the current clearance is L_clear then the computation cannot create, read or write to objects labeled L such that L `canFlowTo` L_clear does not hold.

This module exports the LIO monad, functions to access the internal state (e.g., getLabel and getClearance), functions for raising and catching exceptions, and IFC guards. Exceptions are core to LIO since they provide a way to deal with potentially-misbehaving untrusted code. Specifically, when a computation is about to violate IFC (as writeFile above), an exception is raised. Guards provide a useful abstraction for dealing with labeled objects; they should be used before performing a read-only, write-only, or read-write operation on a labeled object. The remaining core, but not all, abstractions are exported by LIO.

Synopsis

LIO monad

data LIO l a Source

The LIO monad is a state monad, with IO as the underlying monad, that carries along a current label (lioLabel) and current clearance (lioClearance). The current label imposes restrictions on what the current computation may read and write (e.g., no writes to public channels after reading sensitive data). Since the current label can be raised to be permissive in what a computation observes, we need a way to prevent certain computations from reading overly sensitive data. This is the role of the current clearance: it imposes an upper bound on the current label.

Instances

Label l => MonadLIO l (LIO l) 
Monad (LIO l) 
Functor (LIO l) 
Applicative (LIO l) 
(SLabel l, HandleOps Handle b IO) => HandleOps (LabeledHandle l) b (LIO l) 

class (Monad m, Label l) => MonadLIO l m | m -> l whereSource

Synonym for monad in which LIO is the base monad.

Methods

liftLIO :: LIO l a -> m aSource

Lift an LIO computation.

Instances

Label l => MonadLIO l (LIO l) 

Execute LIO actions

evalLIOSource

Arguments

:: Label l 
=> LIO l a

LIO computation

-> LIOState l

Initial state

-> IO a 

Given an LIO computation and some initial state, return an IO action which when executed will perform the IFC-safe LIO computation.

Because untrusted code cannot execute IO computations, this function should only be useful within trusted code. No harm is done from exposing the evalLIO symbol to untrusted code. (In general, untrusted code is free to produce IO computations, but it cannot execute them.)

runLIOSource

Arguments

:: Label l 
=> LIO l a

LIO computation that may throw an exception

-> LIOState l

Initial state

-> IO (a, LIOState l) 

Execute an LIO action, returning the final state. See evalLIO.

tryLIOSource

Arguments

:: Label l 
=> LIO l a

LIO computation that may throw an exception

-> LIOState l

Initial state

-> IO (Either (LabeledException l) a, LIOState l) 

Similar to evalLIO, but catches all exceptions exceptions thrown with throwLIO.

paranoidLIOSource

Arguments

:: Label l 
=> LIO l a

LIO computation that may throw an exception

-> LIOState l

Initial state

-> IO (Either SomeException (a, LIOState l)) 

Similar to evalLIO, but catches all exceptions, including language level exceptions.

Internal state

data LIOState l Source

Internal state of an LIO computation.

Constructors

LIOState 

Fields

lioLabel :: !l

Current label.

lioClearance :: !l

Current clearance.

Instances

Eq l => Eq (LIOState l) 
Read l => Read (LIOState l) 
Show l => Show (LIOState l) 

Current label

getLabel :: MonadLIO l m => m lSource

Returns the current value of the thread's label.

setLabel :: MonadLIO l m => l -> m ()Source

Raise the current label to the provided label, which must be between the current label and clearance. See taint.

setLabelP :: (MonadLIO l m, Priv l p) => p -> l -> m ()Source

If the current label is oldLabel and the current clearance is clearance, this function allows code to raise the current label to any value newLabel such that oldLabel `canFlowTo` newLabel && newLabel `canFlowTo` clearance.

Current clerance

getClearance :: MonadLIO l m => m lSource

Returns the current value of the thread's clearance.

setClearance :: MonadLIO l m => l -> m ()Source

Lower the current clearance. The new clerance must be between the current label and clerance. One cannot raise the current label or create object with labels higher than the current clearance.

setClearanceP :: (MonadLIO l m, Priv l p) => p -> l -> m ()Source

Raise the current clearance (undoing the effects of setClearance) by exercising privileges. If the current label is l and current clearance is c, then setClearanceP p cnew succeeds only if the new clearance is can flow to the current clearance (modulo privileges), i.e., canFlowToP p cnew c must hold. Additionally, the current label must flow to the new clearance, i.e., l `canFlowTo` cnew must hold.

withClearance :: Label l => l -> LIO l a -> LIO l aSource

Lowers the clearance of a computation, then restores the clearance to its previous value (actually, to the upper bound of the current label and previous value). Useful to wrap around a computation if you want to be sure you can catch exceptions thrown by it. The supplied clearance label must be bounded by the current label and clearance as enforced by guardAlloc.

Note that if the computation inside withClearance acquires any Privs, it may still be able to raise its clearance above the supplied argument using setClearanceP.

withClearanceP :: Priv l p => p -> l -> LIO l a -> LIO l aSource

Same as withClearance, but uses privileges when applying guardAllocP to the supplied label.

Exceptions

We must define throwIO- and catch-like functions to work in the LIO monad. A complication is that exceptions could potentially leak information. For instance, one might examine a secret bit, and throw an exception when the bit is 1 but not 0. Allowing untrusted code to catch the exception leaks the bit.

The solution is to wrap exceptions up with a label. The exception may be caught, but only if the label of the exception can flow to the label at the point the catch statement began execution. Arbitrary code can use throwLIO to throw an exception that will be labeled with the current label, while catchLIO can be used to catch exceptions (whose label flows to the current clearance). Wherever possible, code should use the catchLIOP and onExceptionP variants that use privileges to downgrade the exception.

If an exception is uncaught in the LIO monad, the evalLIO function will re-throw the exception, so that it is okay to throw exceptions from within the LIO monad and catch them within the IO monad. Of course, code in the IO monad must be careful not to let the LIO code exploit it to exfiltrate information. Hence, we recommend the use of paranoidLIO to execute LIO actions as to prevent accidental, but unwanted crashes.

Note: Do not use throw (as opposed to throwLIO) within the LIO monad. Because throw can be invoked from pure code, it has no notion of current label and so cannot assign an appropriate label to the exception. As a result, the exception will not be catchable within the LIO monad and will propagate all the way out to the executing IO layer. Similarly, asynchronous exceptions (such as divide by zero or undefined values in lazily evaluated expressions) cannot be caught within the LIO monad.

data LabeledException l Source

A labeled exception is simply an exception associated with a label.

Throwing exceptions

throwLIO :: (Exception e, MonadLIO l m) => e -> m aSource

Throw an exception. The label on the exception is the current label.

Catching exceptions

catchLIO :: (Exception e, Label l) => LIO l a -> (e -> LIO l a) -> LIO l aSource

Catches an exception, so long as the label at the point where the exception was thrown can flow to the clearance at which catchLIO is invoked. Note that the handler raises the current label to the join (upperBound) of the current label and exception label.

catchLIOP :: (Exception e, Priv l p) => p -> LIO l a -> (e -> LIO l a) -> LIO l aSource

Same as catchLIO but does not use privileges when raising the current label to the join of the current label and exception label.

Utilities

Similar to Control.Exception we export onException, finally and bracket which should be used by programmers to properly acquire and release resources in the presence of exceptions. Different from Control.Exception our non-TCB utilities are not implemented in terms of mask, and thus untrusted threads may be killed (and thus garbage collected) with synchronous exceptions. Of course, only trusted code may has access to throwTo-like functionality.

onExceptionSource

Arguments

:: Label l 
=> LIO l a

The computation to run

-> LIO l b

Computation to run on exception

-> LIO l a

Result if no exception thrown

Performs an action only if there was an exception raised by the computation. Note that the exception is rethrown after the final computation is executed.

onExceptionPSource

Arguments

:: Priv l p 
=> p

Privileges to downgrade exception

-> LIO l a

The computation to run

-> LIO l b

Computation to run on exception

-> LIO l a

Result if no exception thrown

Privileged version of onExceptionP. onException cannot run its handler if the label was raised in the computation that threw the exception. This variant allows privileges to be supplied, so as to catch exceptions thrown with a "higher" label.

finallySource

Arguments

:: Label l 
=> LIO l a

The computation to run firstly

-> LIO l b

Final computation to run (even if exception is thrown)

-> LIO l a

Result of first action

Execute a computation and a finalizer, which is executed even if an exception is raised in the first computation.

finallyPSource

Arguments

:: Priv l p 
=> p

Privileges to downgrade exception

-> LIO l a

The computation to run firstly

-> LIO l b

Final computation to run (even if exception is thrown)

-> LIO l a

Result of first action

Version of finally that uses privileges when handling exceptions thrown in the first computation.

bracketSource

Arguments

:: Label l 
=> LIO l a

Computation to run first

-> (a -> LIO l c)

Computation to run last

-> (a -> LIO l b)

Computation to run in-between

-> LIO l b 

The bracket function is used in patterns where you acquire a resource, perform a computation on it, and then release the resource. The function releases the resource even if an exception is raised in the computation. An example of its use case is file handling:

  bracket
    (openFile ... {- open file -} )
    (\handle -> {- close file -} )
    (\handle -> {- computation on handle -})

Note: bracket does not use mask and thus asynchronous may leave the resource unreleased if the thread is killed in during release. An interface for arbitrarily killing threads is not provided by LIO.

bracketPSource

Arguments

:: Priv l p 
=> p

Priviliges used to downgrade

-> LIO l a

Computation to run first

-> (a -> LIO l c)

Computation to run last

-> (a -> LIO l b)

Computation to run in-between

-> LIO l b 

Like bracket, but uses privileges to downgrade the label of any raised exception.

evaluate :: MonadLIO l m => a -> m aSource

Forces its argument to be evaluated to weak head normal form when the resultant LIO action is executed. This is simply a wrapper for Control.Exception's evaluate.

Exceptions thrown by LIO

Library functions throw an exceptions before an IFC violation can take place. MonitorFailure should be used when the reason for failure is sufficiently described by the type. Otherwise, VMonitorFailure (i.e., "Verbose"-MonitorFailure) should be used to further describe the error.

data MonitorFailure Source

Exceptions thrown when some IFC restriction is about to be violated.

Constructors

ClearanceViolation

Current label would exceed clearance, or object label is above clearance.

CurrentLabelViolation

Clearance would be below current label, or object label is not above current label.

InsufficientPrivs

Insufficient privileges. Thrown when lowering the current label or raising the clearance cannot be accomplished with the supplied privileges.

CanFlowToViolation

Generic can-flow-to failure, use with VMonitorFailure

data VMonitorFailure Source

Verbose version of MonitorFailure also carrying around a detailed message.

Constructors

VMonitorFailure 

Fields

monitorFailure :: MonitorFailure

Generic monitor failure.

monitorMessage :: String

Detailed message of failure.

Guards

Guards are used by (usually privileged) code to check that the invoking, unprivileged code has access to particular data. If the current label is lcurrent and the current clearance is ccurrent, then the following checks should be performed when accessing data labeled ldata:

  • When reading an object labeled ldata, it must be the case that ldata `canFlowTo` lcurrent. This check is performed by the taint function, so named because it "taints" the current LIO context by raising lcurrent until ldata `canFlowTo` lcurrent. (Specifically, it does this by computing the least upperBound of the two labels.) However, this is done only if the new lcurrent `canFlowTo` ccurrent.
  • When creating or allocating objects, it is permissible for them to be higher than the current label, so long as they are below the current clearance. In other words, it must be the case that lcurrent `canFlowTo` ldata && ldata `canFlowTo` ccurrent. This is ensured by the guardAlloc function.
  • When writing an object, it should be the case that lcurrent `canFlowTo` ldata && ldata `canFlowTo` lcurrent. (As stated, this is the same as saying ldata == lcurrent, but the two are different when using canFlowToP instead of canFlowTo.) This is ensured by the guardWrite function, which does the equivalent of taint to ensure the target label ldata can flow to the current label, then throws an exception if lcurrent cannot flow back to the target label.

Note that in this case a write always implies a read. Hence, when writing to an object for which you can observe the result, you must use guardWrite. However, when performing a write for which there is no observable side-effects to the writer, i.e., you cannot observe the success or failure of the write, then it is safe to solely use guardAlloc.

The taintP, guardAllocP, and guardWriteP functions are variants of the above that take privilege to be more permissive and raise the current label less.

guardAlloc :: MonadLIO l m => l -> m ()Source

Ensures the label argument is between the current IO label and current IO clearance. Use this function in code that allocates objects--untrusted code shouldn't be able to create an object labeled l unless guardAlloc l does not throw an exception. Similarly use this guard in any code that writes to an object labeled l for which the write has no observable side-effects.

If the label does not flow to clearance ClearanceViolation is thrown; if the current label does not flow to the argument label CurrentLabelViolation is thrown.

guardAllocP :: (MonadLIO l m, Priv l p) => p -> l -> m ()Source

Like guardAlloc, but takes privilege argument to be more permissive. Note: privileges are only used when checking that the current label can flow to the given label.

Read-only

taint :: MonadLIO l m => l -> m ()Source

Use taint l in trusted code before observing an object labeled l. This will raise the current label to a value l' such that l `canFlowTo` l', or throw ClearanceViolation if l' would have to be higher than the current clearance.

taintP :: (MonadLIO l m, Priv l p) => p -> l -> m ()Source

Like taint, but use privileges to reduce the amount of taint required. Note that taintP will never lower the current label. It simply uses privileges to avoid raising the label as high as taint would raise it.

Write

guardWrite :: MonadLIO l m => l -> m ()Source

Use guardWrite l in any (trusted) code before modifying an object labeled l, for which a the modification can be observed, i.e., the write implies a read.

The implementation of guardWrite is straight forward:

 guardWrite l = taint l >> guardAlloc l

This guarantees that l `canFlowTo` the current label (and clearance), and that the current label `canFlowTo` l.

guardWriteP :: (MonadLIO l m, Priv l p) => p -> l -> m ()Source

Like guardWrite, but takes privilege argument to be more permissive.