From: FabF <fabian.frederick@skynet.be>
To: Tigran Aivazian <tigran@aivazian.fsnet.co.uk>
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: question about /proc/<PID>/mem in 2.4
Date: Mon, 05 Jul 2004 15:37:22 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1089034642.2129.3.camel@localhost.localdomain> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.44.0407051422240.18740-100000@localhost.localdomain>
On Mon, 2004-07-05 at 15:27, Tigran Aivazian wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I noticed that in 2.4.x kernels the fs/proc/base.c:mem_read() function has
> this permission check:
>
> if (!MAY_PTRACE(task) || !may_ptrace_attach(task))
> return -ESRCH;
>
> Are you sure it shouldn't be like this instead:
>
> if (!MAY_PTRACE(task) && !may_ptrace_attach(task))
> return -ESRCH;
>
> Because, normally MAY_PTRACE() is 0 (i.e. for any process worth looking at :)
> so may_ptrace_attach() is never even called.
>
MAY_PTRACE is 1 normally AFAICS.The check as it stands wants both to
have non zero returns so is more restrictive than the one you're asking
for.
> Is there any reason for the above check on each read(2)? Shouldn't there
> be a simple check at ->open() time only? I assume this is to close some
> obscure "security hole" but I would like to see the explanation of how
> could any problem arise if a) such check wasn't done at all (except at
> open(2) time) or at least b) there was && instead of ||.
cf. chmod thread.
>
> The 2.6.x situation is similar except the addition of the security stuff.
>
> Kind regards
> Tigran
>
> -
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>
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2004-07-05 13:37 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2004-07-05 13:27 question about /proc/<PID>/mem in 2.4 Tigran Aivazian
2004-07-05 13:37 ` FabF [this message]
2004-07-05 14:22 ` Tigran Aivazian
2004-07-05 14:25 ` FabF
2004-07-06 11:14 ` Tigran Aivazian
2004-07-06 10:49 ` Arjan van de Ven
2004-07-06 11:35 ` Tigran Aivazian
2004-07-06 11:04 ` Marcelo Tosatti
2004-07-06 13:08 ` Tigran Aivazian
2004-07-06 16:31 ` Alan Cox
2004-07-07 13:53 ` Tigran Aivazian
2004-07-07 13:26 ` Tigran Aivazian
2004-07-07 16:21 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2004-07-07 16:13 ` Alan Cox
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