Date: Fri, 12 Jan 2007 18:54:39 -0800 From: James Long <list@museum.rain.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Cc: rushani@freebsd.org Subject: Re: /dev/null in a chroot Message-ID: <20070113025439.GA63533@ns.umpquanet.com>
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> Date: Sun, 07 Jan 2007 20:03:40 -0400 > From: "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@hub.org> > Subject: Re: /dev/null in a chroot > To: Michael Grant <mgrant@grant.org>, FreeBSD Questions > <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> > Message-ID: <8A1292FC91669855CE9C3403@ganymede.hub.org> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > > #!/bin/sh > /sbin/devfs -m $1 rule apply hide > /sbin/devfs -m $1 rule apply path null unhide > > where $1 == the dev directory you mount within the chroot environment ... This issue is currently biting users of /usr/ports/security/scponly also, I believe. I'm finding that recently-created scponlyc chroots do not permit sftp login, although they do allow ftp login. The client symptom is just: $ sftp newuser@www Connecting to www... Password: Connection closed $ The cause appears to be that recent versions of /usr/libexec/sftp-server will complain about of lack of access to /dev/null and exit, resulting in the closed connection witnessed by the remote client. The solution appears to be to create a devfs in the scponlyc chroot. This is a little disappointing, as scponlyc used to be delightfully lightweight and low-maintenance. At this point, my understanding is that the devfs requirement means that now I must run a script at boot time that iterates through a list of chroot'ed users and create dev nodes within each jail. scponlyc jails were previously a set-and-forget type of setup. What is the proper mechanism for setting up an arbitrary number of scponlyc chroots at boot time? /usr/share/examples/etc/devfs.conf doesn't show an example of how to apply these rules to a non-default dev path. I have chosen to put a script in /usr/local/etc/rc.d. In case other scponly users are reading this in the archives, the manual method that works for me with 6.2-PRE and scponly-4.6_1 is: # cd ~user # mkdir -p dev # mount_devfs devfs dev # devfs -m dev rule -s 1 applyset # devfs -m dev rule -s 2 applyset One then sees: # ls -l dev total 0 crw-rw-rw- 1 root wheel 0, 6 Jan 12 17:15 null crw-rw-rw- 1 root wheel 0, 12 Jan 10 07:57 random lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 6 Jan 12 16:54 urandom@ -> random crw-rw-rw- 1 root wheel 0, 7 Jan 10 15:57 zero which is more than enough to appease /usr/libexec/sftp-server. chroots created some months ago contain lib versions with numbers typically one less, such as ./usr/lib/libssh.so.2 in the older chroot, versus ./usr/lib/libssh.so.3 in the newer. The older scponly chroots do net require devfs nodes! I suspect they will eventually break though, given enough time. Given that scponlyc provides a setup_chroot.sh script that provides hooks for OS-specific chroot setup steps, would it help the port maintainer to provide the shell script below? I have it installed in /usr/local/etc/rc.d/scponlyc.sh. Jim #!/bin/sh # script to create devfs filesystems at boot time for scponlyc # chroot'ed users. We will read /etc/shells to determine # where scponlyc is installed. Then we'll iterate through # each user in /etc/passwd to find users whose shell is set to # scponlyc. For each such user found, we will create a # minimal devfs under ~/dev. SCPONLYC=$(/usr/bin/grep "/scponlyc$" /etc/shells 2>/dev/null | /usr/bin/tail -1) make_devfs() { # $1 is the user name whose home directory needs a minimal # devfs created. If ~/dev is not a directory, it will be # deleted and replaced with a directory. eval DEV="~$1/dev" while /sbin/umount ${DEV} 2>/dev/null; do :; done [ -h "${DEV}" ] && rm "${DEV}" [ -f "${DEV}" ] && rm "${DEV}" mkdir -p "${DEV}" if /sbin/mount_devfs devfs "${DEV}"; then /sbin/devfs -m "${DEV}" rule -s 1 applyset || /sbin/umount ${DEV} 2>/dev/null /sbin/devfs -m "${DEV}" rule -s 2 applyset || /sbin/umount ${DEV} 2>/dev/null fi } scponly_startup() { # $1 is the path to the /etc/passwd file if [ "x${SCPONLYC}" = "x" ]; then echo scponlyc is not defined in /etc/shells >&2 exit 1 fi /usr/bin/grep -v "^[ ]*#" "$1" | /usr/bin/awk -F: {'print $1 " " $7'} | while read USER SHELL; do if [ "x${SHELL}" = "x${SCPONLYC}" ]; then make_devfs "${USER}" fi done } case "$1" in start) scponly_startup "/etc/passwd" echo -n ' scponlyc' ;; *) echo "Usage: `basename $0` start" >&2 ;; esac exit 0
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