Date: Mon, 22 Jan 1996 13:16:15 +0100 (MET) From: Luigi Rizzo <luigi@labinfo.iet.unipi.it> To: mpp@mpp.minn.net (Mike Pritchard) Cc: davidg@Root.COM, imp@village.org, hackers@freebsd.org, dworkin@rover.village.org Subject: Re: Security (was: Re: Two commands: icat and ils) Message-ID: <199601221216.NAA05095@labinfo.iet.unipi.it> In-Reply-To: <199601221142.FAA18087@mpp.minn.net> from "Mike Pritchard" at Jan 22, 96 05:42:32 am
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> Luigi Rizzo wrote: > > > > > > That's not the reason they have read permissions removed. It's common for > > > people to have /sbin in their path - to pick up useful utilities which > > > probably shouldn't be in /sbin anyway (like ifconfig and ping, for example), > > > and executing /sbin/init by accident is not a good thing. > > > > Two objections: > > > > 1) just make /sbin/init mode 544 then. Actually, shouldn't it work > > even if it has mode 444 ? > > 2) would it be that hard to fix init so as to quit if its not > > appropriate for it to run (e.g. check process id, another instance > > running, etc.) ? I am asking because I don't know what are the > > implications, but if the consequences are so bad... > > Actually, init already does this. Here are the first few > lines of code from init.c: > > /* Dispose of random users. */ > if (getuid() != 0) { > (void)fprintf(stderr, "init: %s\n", strerror(EPERM)); > exit (1); > } > > /* System V users like to reexec init. */ > if (getpid() != 1) { > (void)fprintf(stderr, "init: already running\n"); > exit (1); > } so it seems that there is really no point in keeping the current protection modes. Luigi
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