Re: RFC: disablenetwork facility. (v4)

From: Serge E. Hallyn
Date: Tue Dec 29 2009 - 11:39:49 EST


Quoting Bryan Donlan (bdonlan@xxxxxxxxx):
> On Tue, Dec 29, 2009 at 10:11 AM, Serge E. Hallyn <serue@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > Eric, let me specifically point out a 'disable setuid-root'
> > problem on linux: root still owns most of the system even when
> > it's not privileged.  So does "disable setuid-root" mean
> > we don't allow exec of setuid-root binaries at all, or that
> > we don't setuid to root, or that we just don't raise privileges
> > for setuid-root?
>
> I, for one, think it would be best to handle it exactly like the
> nosuid mount option - that is, pretend the file doesn't have any
> setuid bits set. There's no reason to deny execution; if the process
> would otherwise be able to execute it, it can also copy the file to
> make a non-suid version and execute that instead. And some programs
> can operate with reduced function without setuid. For example, screen
> comes to mind; it needs root to share screen sessions between multiple
> users, but can operate for a single user just fine without root, and
> indeed the latter is usually the default configuration.

That's fine with me, seems safe for a fully unprivileged program to
use, and would make sense to do through one of the securebits set
with prctl(PR_SET_SECUREBITS).

In addition, I assume we would also refuse to honor file capabilities?

-serge
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