Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
cperciva
77ddd4dd00 Remove dead code. (This loop counted the number of rules, but the count
was never used.)

Reported by:	pjd
Approved by:	rwatson
2004-05-15 20:55:19 +00:00
rwatson
4c7d3f7221 Pay attention to mac_portacl_enabled.
Submitted by:   simon
2004-01-20 18:33:02 +00:00
phk
f2ac891f06 Including <sys/stdint.h> is (almost?) universally only to be able to use
%j in printfs, so put a newsted include in <sys/systm.h> where the printf
prototype lives and save everybody else the trouble.
2003-03-18 08:45:25 +00:00
kan
bc7c3815c9 Do not depend on namespace pollution, explicitly include sys/sx.h 2003-03-12 02:55:20 +00:00
rwatson
c7d4bf959c A cute yet small MAC policy that provides a simple ACL mechanism to
permit users and groups to bind ports for TCP or UDP, and is intended
to be combined with the recently committed support for
net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedhigh.  The policy is twiddled using
sysctl(8).  To use this module, you will need to compile in MAC
support, and probably set reservedhigh to 0, then twiddle
security.mac.portacl.rules to set things as desired.  This policy
module only restricts ports explicitly bound using bind(), not
implicitly bound ports where the port number is selected by the
IP stack.  It appears to work properly in my local configuration,
but needs more broad testing.

A sample policy might be:

  # sysctl security.mac.portacl.rules="uid:425:tcp:80,uid:425:tcp:79"

This permits uid 425 to bind TCP sockets to ports 79 and 80.  Currently
no distinction is made for incoming vs. outgoing ports with TCP,
although that would probably be easy to add.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-03-02 23:01:42 +00:00