|
|
 |
| New User, Welcome! Login |
Re: /proc filesystem allows bypassing directory permissions on Linux
| From: |
Dan Yefimov <dan lightwave net ru> |
| To: |
Pavel Machek <pavel ucw cz> |
| Cc: |
bugtraq securityfocus com |
| Subject: |
Re: /proc filesystem allows bypassing directory permissions on Linux |
| Date: |
Fri - Oct 23, 2009 03:47 PM |
On 24.10.2009 1:56, Pavel Machek wrote:
> Now... go back to my original email:
>
> %pavel@toy:/tmp/my_priv$ chmod 700 .
> %# relax file permissions, directory is private, so this is safe
> %# check link count on unwritable_file. We would not want someone
> %# to have a hard link to work around our permissions, would we?
> %pavel@toy:/tmp/my_priv$ chmod 666 unwritable_file
>
> Yes, you are right, open file descriptor acts as a kind of hardlink
> here. Except that
>
> a) this kind of hardlink does not exist when /proc is mounted (and on
> non-Linux)
>
> b) unlike other hardlinks, you can't see it on the link count
>
> (and c) writing to file descriptor opened read-only is bad).
>
>>> Plus, you may run traditional unix/POSIX application, expecting
>>> directory access controls to prevent the write. (Or can you see a way
>>> to write to that file when /proc is unmounted?)
>>>
>> Directory permissions control an access just to the directory
>> itself, not to the files in it, so your pretensions are in fact
>> illegitimate.
>
> Demonstrate how to get access to the file with /proc unmounted and you
> have a point. Demonstrate how to get access on anything else then
> Linux and you have a point. Otherwise there's a security hole.
>
Did you think of creating a hardlink to the file in an unrestricted location?
That is the like "security hole".
--
Sincerely Your, Dan.
|
|
|
Copyright © 1995-2012 LinuxRocket.net. All rights reserved.
Nearly all of LinuxRocket's features are free. Be kind and donate to the cause!