Re: linux capabilities oddity
From: Frank v Waveren
Date: Thu Jul 27 2006 - 10:17:43 EST
On Tue, Jul 25, 2006 at 01:47:19PM -0500, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
> Quoting Frank v Waveren (fvw@xxxxxx):
> > While debugging an odd problem where /proc/sys/kernel/cap-bound wasn't
> > working, I came across the following code at
> > linux-2.6.x/security/commoncap.c:140:
> >
> > void cap_bprm_apply_creds (struct linux_binprm *bprm, int unsafe)
> > {
> > /* Derived from fs/exec.c:compute_creds. */
> > kernel_cap_t new_permitted, working;
> >
> > new_permitted = cap_intersect (bprm->cap_permitted, cap_bset);
> > working = cap_intersect (bprm->cap_inheritable,
> > current->cap_inheritable);
> > new_permitted = cap_combine (new_permitted, working);
> > ...
> >
> > Here the new permitted set gets limited to the bits in cap_bset, which
> > is as it should be, but then the intersection of the of the current
> > and exec inheritable masks get added to that set, whereas as I
> > understand it, cap_bset should always be the bounding set.
> [...]
>
> Actually going by the faq
> (http://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/security/linux-privs/kernel-2.4/capfaq-0.2.txt)
> it seems like the cap_intersect with current->cap_inheritable is *too*
> limiting. I haven't checked what the posix draft actually says, but the
> bprm->cap_inheritable is called the 'forced' set, and is supposed to be
> like setuid.
I don't think the force set should be able to override the cap bound
though. Like the force/setuid analogy, I think we can compare the
cap_bset to the old securelevel system, which means that it should be
the bounding factor. Even if you have setuids on a system with a
raised securelevel, they still can't do the restricted operations.
Once again, this is not based on what the POSIX 1003.1e says, as a
matter of fact I can't find anything about lowering the systemwide
bound externally (as opposed to by not having forced-set executables
and dropping the caps from all processes) at all in a quick grep of
the document, so I suspect this is entirely outside of the spec anyway.
--
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