Hi Stefan,

> On Aug 3, 2017, at 12:41 PM, Stefan Hajnoczi <stefa...@redhat.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Jorgen,
> There are 3 sockopts defined in include/uapi/linux/vm_sockets.h that are
> currently not implemented in net/vmw_vsock/af_vsock.c:
> 
> * SO_VM_SOCKETS_PEER_HOST_VM_ID
> * SO_VM_SOCKETS_TRUSTED
> * SO_VM_SOCKETS_NONBLOCK_TXRX
> 
> I noticed this because SO_VM_SOCKETS_TRUSTED is interesting for
> virtio-vsock.  Services listening on AF_VSOCK inside the guest may not
> want arbitrary unprivileged host processes to connect.  Instead of
> inventing a new solution I wanted to look into SO_VM_SOCKETS_TRUSTED but
> found it is not implemented in linux.git.
> 
> What is the status of these sockets?

These options were only implemented for ESX host endpoints, so were never part 
of the Linux host side support. It looks like they could have been omitted from 
vm_sockets.h, when the initial upstreaming was performed.

On ESX, the equivalent of SO_VM_SOCKETS_TRUSTED, is used for retrieving the 
value of s->trusted of a VMCI socket. It cannot be used to mark a socket as 
trusted. On Linux, trusted is tied to the CAP_NET_ADMIN capability of the 
socket creator. VMCI based vSockets will per default only allow host side 
sockets that are trusted, or are created by the same user as the VM, to 
communicate with a given VM. This is achieved by per default creating VMs with 
the VMCI privilege flag VMCI_PRIVILEGE_FLAG_RESTRICTED. It is possible to 
create a VM that isn’t restricted, in which case any host process will be able 
to communicate with the VM.

So it should be straight forward to implement the getsockopt part of 
SO_VM_SOCKETS_TRUSTED, since it just needs to return s->trusted.

Thanks,
Jorgen

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