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Date:      Sun, 6 Jan 2002 11:23:45 -0800
From:      "Crist J. Clark" <cristjc@earthlink.net>
To:        Joe Abley <jabley@automagic.org>
Cc:        Haikal Saadh <wyldephyre2@yahoo.com>, stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Chrooted bind  out of the box
Message-ID:  <20020106112345.B237@gohan.cjclark.org>
In-Reply-To: <20020105222558.A95067@buffoon.automagic.org>; from jabley@automagic.org on Sat, Jan 05, 2002 at 10:26:01PM -0500
References:  <000001c195b1$db087880$41c801ca@warhawk> <20020105140846.D204@gohan.cjclark.org> <20020105222558.A95067@buffoon.automagic.org>

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On Sat, Jan 05, 2002 at 10:26:01PM -0500, Joe Abley wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 05, 2002 at 02:08:46PM -0800, Crist J. Clark wrote:
> > On Sat, Jan 05, 2002 at 11:26:00AM +0500, Haikal Saadh wrote:
> > > Is there a reason why bind is run as root by default and not bind.bind?
> > > And not chrooted?
> > > 
> > > If I'm not mistaken almost everyone does this anyway, right?
> > 
> > IIRC, the last time it was discussed, it was felt changing this in the
> > middle of -STABLE would be too disruptive. Many working BIND
> > installations would break when people updated.
> 
> Why not create a named_chroot variable in defaults/rc.conf which
> is by default set to NO, but which sysinstall can override in
> /etc/rc.conf with a YES for fresh (non-upgrade) installs?

/etc/defaults/rc.conf are the defaults. Not everyone makes a new
system with sysinstall(8), and having sysinstall(8) put new and
unexpected things in rc.conf is in itself a POLA vilolation.

I was talking more about running named(8) as bind:bind. Chrooting has
other issues, you need to actually build a chroot environment
somewhere and decide what to put in it, and you still need to run as
bind:bind for chrooting to be much of a security measure.

Running named(8) as bind:bind by default is easiest done by changing
the named_bind flags. As I said, changing the default would break
stuff, but if you look at /etc/defaults/rc.conf in -STABLE,

named_flags=""			# Flags for named
#named_flags="-u bind -g bind"	# Flags for named

So the hint is already there. And if you look at -CURRENT,

named_flags="-u bind -g bind"	# Flags for named

It already runs that way by default.

But if you really want to be clever, you should run named(8) in a
jail(8).
-- 
"It's always funny until someone gets hurt. Then it's hilarious."

Crist J. Clark                     |     cjclark@alum.mit.edu
                                   |     cjclark@jhu.edu
http://people.freebsd.org/~cjc/    |     cjc@freebsd.org

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