The next release of the Linux kernel, 6.6 [will] include the KSMBD in-kernel server for the SMB networking protocol, developed by Samsung’s Namjae Jeon.

it has faced considerable security testing and as a result it is no longer marked as experimental.

It’s compatible with existing Samba configuration files.

But why is KSMBD important? First off, it promises considerable performance gains and better support for modern features such as Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA)… KSMBD also adds enhanced security, considerably better performance for both single and multi-thread read/write, better stability, and higher compatibility. In the end, hopefully, this KSMBD will also mean easier share setups in Linux without having to jump through the same hoops one must with the traditional Samba setup.

  • tal@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    24
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    There have been vulnerabilities on the TCP/IP stack on a number of platforms (maybe all?), and that’s a rather smaller attack surface.

    EDIT: It also looks like ksmbd has already built itself a bit of a security history:

    https://access.redhat.com/solutions/6991749

    EDIT2: A bad security history:

    https://lwn.net/Articles/871866/

    The commit history for ksmbd shows a steady stream of fixes, as expected. Worryingly, though, many of the problems being fixed are clearly security issues — not a good thing in a network filesystem implementation. Examples include:

    • The code to change ownership and permissions did not check existing file permissions first.
    • Failure to validate data lengths could lead to access to invalid data.
    • The server would blindly follow symbolic links during pathname lookup.
    • Numerous failures to validate buffer lengths, such as this one or this one.

    All of those fixes were applied after ksmbd landed in the mainline; there are others that came before. Currently, twelve fixes to ksmbd credit Coverity scans in their changelogs.

    Those would worry me if they showed up in a production userspace network filesystem.