Date: Fri, 09 Apr 2010 23:29:43 -0600 From: "Erich Jenkins, Fuujin Group Ltd" <erich@fuujingroup.com> To: freebsd-bugs@freebsd.org Subject: jail users can delete files they shouldn't Message-ID: <4BC00CC7.4080907@fuujingroup.com>
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I've gone through the archives for the Jail list, and I'm not finding anything specific to the issue we're experiencing. My apologies if this is a known issue or if I've done something daft, but there appears to be a file permission issue with jails. We have a large deployment of jailed systems, and an issue was brought to my attention today that I hope very much is the result of a misconfiguration or other mistake. Background: Environment is FreeBSD 7.0-REL and 8.0-REL Platforms include i386 (x86 Xeon), amd64 (Opteron) and sparc64 (Netra X1's) Jail environment is a Complete jail, not an application jail Situation: A user managed to kill an apache process today, resulting in their virtual web server (in a jail) going down. The user does not have root privileges on this box, and is not a member of wheel. Upon inspection, I found that the user had deleted a config file that was owned by root (chmod 700). It appears they were not able to read the file, but they were able to delete it which I confirmed with the user. Test: To verify what appeared to be happening, I created a file in the users home directory (typed some garbage into a text file) owned by root (700) and in the wheel group. I then logged into the users account via ssh as that user. I attempted to su to root, which I could not (as expected). I tried to read the file and could not (as expected). Then I tried to delete the file. Bingo. File was gone. I also tried this via FTP using their account and the same thing happened. I could delete the file, but could not transfer it, nor open it. Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated. I've tried this in the lab and on some production boxes, and this appears to affect 7.0-REL and 8.0-REL (the only versions in the environment). This also does not appear to be specific to any particular architecture as I have tested on sparc64, amd64 and i386 boxes. -- Erich M. Jenkins Fuujin Group Limited "You should never, never doubt what no one is sure about." -- Gene Wilder
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