Re: "core dump helper" runs always as root

From: Chris Snook
Date: Tue Jun 03 2008 - 18:00:00 EST


Christian Perle wrote:
Hi *

I recently played around with the /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern file
(2.6.24.7 and 2.6.25) and found out that processes started by the
"|/path/to/executable" notation always run as root, even if the
segfaulting process runs as non-root.

Is there a reason for this behaviour? If not, i would suggest starting the
process which receives the core dump on stdin as the same UID of the
segfaulting process.

With the current behaviour you can do funny things:

(as root)
# echo "|/bin/chmod 4755 /bin/ash" > /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern

(as user)
$ sleep 2 & kill -11 $!

Of course this is *not* a local root exploit because you need to be root
to write to the proc entry, but IMHO running the "core dump helper" (is
there a better name for this?) always as root is potentially harmful.


Greetings,
Chris

If we run the usermode helper with the privileges of the dying process, what do we do about rlimit enforcement? They don't have a PAM environment, so either they get the default rlimits, or we have to make them inherit their limits from the dying process. This is very problematic if the process died due to exceeding an rlimit.

Userspace is the best place to resolve complex policy issues. If it makes you uncomfortable having your coredump helper run as root, you can implement privilege separation in it, and any arbitrary code you see fit to resolve the rlimit dilemma.

Personally, I would not be opposed to honoring setuid permissions for usermode helpers, as this maintains the separation of policy and mechanism, and leaves no room for ambiguity about the intent of the system administrator.

-- Chris
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