Hello Marco, or anyone else affected,

Accepted sssd into focal-proposed. The package will build now and be
available at https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/sssd/2.2.3-3ubuntu0.4
in a few hours, and then in the -proposed repository.

Please help us by testing this new package.  See
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Testing/EnableProposed for documentation on how
to enable and use -proposed.  Your feedback will aid us getting this
update out to other Ubuntu users.

If this package fixes the bug for you, please add a comment to this bug,
mentioning the version of the package you tested, what testing has been
performed on the package and change the tag from verification-needed-
focal to verification-done-focal. If it does not fix the bug for you,
please add a comment stating that, and change the tag to verification-
failed-focal. In either case, without details of your testing we will
not be able to proceed.

Further information regarding the verification process can be found at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QATeam/PerformingSRUVerification .  Thank you in
advance for helping!

N.B. The updated package will be released to -updates after the bug(s)
fixed by this package have been verified and the package has been in
-proposed for a minimum of 7 days.

** Changed in: sssd (Ubuntu Focal)
       Status: New => Fix Committed

** Tags added: verification-needed verification-needed-focal

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to ca-certificates in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1905790

Title:
  Make SSSD in 20.04 using OpenSSL and p11-kit (instead of NSS) for
  p11_child

Status in ca-certificates package in Ubuntu:
  New
Status in sssd package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released
Status in ca-certificates source package in Focal:
  New
Status in sssd source package in Focal:
  Fix Committed

Bug description:
  [ Impact ]

  SSSD supports in 20.04 two security backends: NSS and OpenSSL
  (speaking in past tense as upstream dropped NSS support completely).

  Those two backends are used for various generic crypto features (so
  they are interchangeable), but also for the management of the PKCS#11
  modules for smart cards.

  In this case, the main problem is that by using NSS it also relies on
  the presence of a "system NSS" database [1] that is something present
  in Fedora and RHEL, but not in ubuntu or generic Linux distributions.

  In order to make SSSD to find a smart card module, we would then need to 
create a such database that mentions a p11kit proxy that will eventually load 
the p11-kit module and then add the card CA certificate to the same DB (see 
more details in [2]).
  And even in such case... It will not work at login phase.

  This is making support for Smart-card based authentication in 20.04
  quite complicated, and hard to implement in professional environments
  (see bug #1865226).

  As per this, recompiling SSSD's p11_child to use OpenSSL (as it
  already happens starting from 20.10) would be enough to make the this
  tool (the one in charge for smartcard authentications and certificate
  matching) to be able to get the smartcard devices from p11-kit allowed
  modules and to check their certificate using CA certificates in the
  ubuntu system ca certificate files (or other configured file).

  One more mayor reason to do this, is also that if we fix 20.04 now to
  use the "proper" method, people who will configure smartcard access
  there via SSSD (not easily possible right now) won't be affected by
  future migrations.

  
  [ Proposed Implementations ]

  1) Use p11-kit and openssl for p11_child, by changing the build/test system 
(preferred)
     https://salsa.debian.org/3v1n0-guest/sssd/-/commits/p11-kit-p11_child

  2) Build both versions and package things accordingly (hackish)
     https://salsa.debian.org/3v1n0-guest/sssd/-/commits/p11-kit-p11_child-v1

  3) Recompile SSSD completely to use libcrypto as backend

  The option 3) has been finally choosen, but we also require migration
  scripts on upgrade.

  
  [ Test case ]

  With a smartcard reader available (and with a card in its slot) as reported 
by:
   $ p11-kit list-modules

  launch:
   $ sudo /usr/libexec/sssd/p11_child --pre -d 10 --debug-fd=2 \
     --nssdb=/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt

  The tool should find your card:

  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:020395): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): Module 
List:
  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:020481): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): common 
name: [p11-kit-trust].
  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:020497): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): dll 
name: [/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/pkcs11/p11-kit-trust.so].
  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:020569): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): 
Description [/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt                              
PKCS#11 Kit                     ] Manufacturer [PKCS#11 Kit                     
] flags [1] removable [false] token present [true].
  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:020611): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): common 
name: [opensc-pkcs11].
  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:020646): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): dll 
name: [/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/pkcs11/opensc-pkcs11.so].
  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:025443): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): 
Description [VMware Virtual USB CCID 00 00                                   
VMware                          ] Manufacturer [VMware                          
] flags [7] removable [true] token present [true].
  (2020-11-26 21:34:22:025725): [p11_child[100729]] [do_card] (0x4000): Found 
[MARCO TREVISAN (PIN CNS0)] in slot [VMware Virtual USB CCID 00 00][0] of 
module [1][/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/pkcs11/opensc-pkcs11.so].

  Then:
   1) If you previously configured SSSD match rules and/or CA certificates:
      - You should still get your certificate public key printed as output
      - Configured login with smartcard should continue working

   2) If SSSD was not configured to do smartcard authentication:
      - p11_child may fail if the card certificate was not previously added to
        the trusted DB, but this is outside of this test case.
      - What it matters is that the card is found.

  [ Regression potential ]

  While the change may involve quite different code paths when it comes
  to security features, I think we trust OpenSSL enough to be an
  acceptable crypto backend for PKCS#11 operations. Behavior should not
  change, also assuming that upstream dropped NSS support completely in
  latest release [3], keeping the same functionalities.

  As per a further review of this by xnox [4], we can safely assume that
  SSSD does not use libcrypto for operations where its behavior should
  differ from NSS. As it's needed only for certificates handling.

  The only binary that is really affected in its behavior is p11_child
  (as per p11-kit usage instead of NSS for getting pkcs#11 modules).

  So this change will break only those setup (if there are any, given
  that smartcard access is currently not supported by ubuntu) that have
  been manually configured using an unsupported system NSS db.

  While we're providing a post-install script that migrates the possibly
  configured NSS CA certificates, there could be still possible
  regressions:

  1) certificates not to be handled (referenced) in the same way, for example 
in the SSSD
     certmap: the mapping between users and their certificate could change, not 
making an
     user being able to access to the system anymore, not being correctly be 
correctly
     associated to a certificate.

     -> This can be fixed by adapting the [certmap/*/*] options in
  sssd.conf

  2) custom p11-kit modules configured as allowed in the NSS database and not 
recognized by
     p11-kit, won't be accepted anymore, so again login won't work as p11_child 
won't find a
     module.

     -> Modules can be added creating .module files in
  /usr/share/p11-kit/modules/

  So 1) can be the mayor concern here, even though I assume the few
  custom installations that there might be around can be adapted to
  this, in case this proves to be an important regression we can go back
  to use NSS as backend for libsss_certs, but still using p11-kit +
  openssl for p11_child.

  Instead 2) can be a lower problem to handle, in case of a regression
  we can think of listing all the modules added to the NSS database, and
  if any, generate a module file for it, but I'd prefer to avoid this
  unless needed as we should trust them.

  Said this, given the fact that there are probably not known
  implementations using this system for authentication in Ubuntu, I'm
  confident that we can accept those two regressions as they are, but
  being prepared to handle them (as described) if they end up in being
  real concerns.

  [1] 
https://github.com/SSSD/sssd/blob/sssd-2_3_1/src/responder/pam/pamsrv.c#L53
  [2] 
https://hackmd.io/@3v1n0/ubuntu-smartcard-login#NSS-Database-to-be-deprecated-post-2004
  [3] https://github.com/SSSD/sssd/issues/1041
  [4] https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/sssd/+bug/1905790/comments/10

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