Re: symlinks with permissions

From: Pavel Machek
Date: Wed Oct 28 2009 - 04:17:12 EST


On Tue 2009-10-27 21:15:54, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> Pavel Machek <pavel@xxxxxx> writes:
>
> > On Mon 2009-10-26 13:57:49, Trond Myklebust wrote:
> >> On Mon, 2009-10-26 at 18:46 +0100, Jan Kara wrote:
> >> > That's what I'd think as well but it does not as I've just learned and
> >> > tested :) proc_pid_follow_link actually directly gives a dentry of the
> >> > target file without checking permissions on the way.
> >
> > It is weider. That symlink even has permissions. Those are not
> > checked, either.
> >
> >> I seem to remember that is deliberate, the point being that a symlink
> >> in /proc/*/fd/ may contain a path that refers to a private namespace.
> >
> > Well, it is unexpected and mild security hole.
>
> /proc/<pid>/fd is only viewable by the owner of the process or by
> someone with CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE. So there appears to be no security
> hole exploitable by people who don't have the file open.

Please see bugtraq discussion at
http://seclists.org/bugtraq/2009/Oct/179 .

(In short, you get read-only fd, and you can upgrade it to read-write
fd. Yes, you are the owner of the process, but you are not owner of
the file the fd refers to.)

> > Part of the problem is that even if you have read-only
> > filedescriptor, you can upgrade it to read-write, even if path is
> > inaccessible to you.
> >
> > So if someone passes you read-only filedescriptor, you can still write
> > to it.
>
> Openly if you actually have permission to open the file again. The actual
> permissions on the file should not be ignored.

The actual permissions of the file are not ignored, but permissions of
the containing directory _are_. If there's 666 file in 700 directory,
you can reopen it read-write, in violation of directory's 700
permissions.
Pavel
--
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