Re: implement-file-posix-capabilities.patch

From: Serge E. Hallyn
Date: Thu Jun 28 2007 - 11:39:13 EST


Quoting Casey Schaufler (casey@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx):
>
> --- Andrew Morgan <morgan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
> > >> Does that explain it?
> > >
> > > Yes, thanks, but then it still could come in handy to have fE be a full
> > > bitset, so the application gets some eff caps automatically, while
> > > others it has to manually set...
> >
> > [We touched on this a number of emails back.]
> >
> > If an application is capability aware, it can manipulate its own
> > capabilities and should have fE=0.
> >
> > If an application is not capability aware, it needs to have *all* of its
> > capabilities enabled at exec() time. Otherwise, it won't work.
>
> The intent of the fE vector in the POSIX draft is that those capabilities
> are set on exec (lower vectors permitting). There are cases where it
> does make sense to raise just some (e.g. ping).
>
> > The only reason for having an fE bitmap is to allow a capability-aware
> > program (you really trust to do its privileged operations carefully) to
> > be lazy and get some of its capabilities raised for free. Perhaps you
> > can clarify why this is a desirable thing? :-)
>
> No, it's to allow you to grant a subset of the available capabilities
> to a program that is not aware of capabilities. You can give "date"
> the capability to reset the clock without giving it the capability
> to remove other people's files without changing the code or running
> it setuid.

Would there be a difference between that and setting either fI or fP
(depending on your intent) to those caps, and setting fE=1 in Andrew's
scheme?

thanks,
-serge
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