Re: RT scheduling and a way to make a process hang, unkillable

From: Dhaval Giani
Date: Tue Feb 17 2009 - 02:23:28 EST


On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 03:16:25PM -0500, Kyle Moffett wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 5:36 AM, Dhaval Giani <dhaval@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Sun, Feb 15, 2009 at 12:24:56PM +0100, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> >> On Sat, 2009-02-14 at 16:51 -0800, Corey Hickey wrote:
> >> > The procedure is for a program to:
> >> > 1. run as root
> >> > 2. set SCHED_FIFO
> >> > 3. change UID to a user with no realtime CPU share allocated
> >>
> >> Hmm, setuid() should fail in that situation.
> >>
> >> /me goes peek at code.
> >>
> >> Can't find any code to make that happen, Dhaval didn't we fix that at
> >> one point?
> >
> > So after some searching around, I realized we did not. Does this help?
> > It fixes it on my system,
> >
> > --
> > sched: Don't allow setuid to succeed if the user does not have rt bandwidth
>
> Erm, hrm, this reminds me of the old sendmail capabilities bug. There
> are an awful lot of buggy binaries out there who assume that if they
> have uid 0 and they call setuid() that it cannot fail. They then do
> all sorts of insecure operations, assuming that they have dropped to
> an unprivileged UID. This one is especially bad because it could bite
> *any* program using setuid() which an admin happens to run with chrt.
>

Would that not be a bug in the application itself and fixed there
itself? As Peter mentions there are other ways setuid can fail as well.

> Specifically, I personally think that:
> * Process is stuck and unkillable
>
> is a much better result than:
> * Process runs arbitrary untrusted code with full-root privs in RT mode.
>

thanks,
--
regards,
Dhaval
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