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Re: /proc filesystem allows bypassing directory permissions on Linux
| From: |
Pavel Machek <pavel ucw cz> |
| To: |
Dan Yefimov <dan lightwave net ru> |
| Cc: |
psz maths usyd edu au, bugtraq securityfocus com |
| Subject: |
Re: /proc filesystem allows bypassing directory permissions on Linux |
| Date: |
Mon - Oct 26, 2009 03:18 AM |
On Mon 2009-10-26 13:42:17, Dan Yefimov wrote:
> On 25.10.2009 2:40, psz@maths.usyd.edu.au wrote:
> >Dear Pavel,
> >
> >>... that's exactly the problem.
> >
> >I see, the /proc/*/fd/* objects seem "confused": are they symlinks,
> >hardlinks, or open file descriptors? I guess should always act as
> >the latter, where access mode flags (O_RDONLY or O_RDWR) are set at
> >open() and not changeable afterwards in fcntl(). Any open() on them
> >should behave as a dup().
> >
> Paul, in authentic kernels /proc/<PID>/fd/<FD> are symlinks, not
> anything other. There're no such publicly accessible file objects,
> as file descriptors, there're only files (including special ones),
> directories and symlinks. But the above words don't necessary relate
> to patched kernels like distributed by third parties.
Check your facts. Those symlinks are special.
Pavel
--
(english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek
(cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html
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