freebsd-nq/sys/kern/capabilities.conf
Mateusz Guzik d05b53e0ba Add sysctlbyname system call
Previously userspace would issue one syscall to resolve the sysctl and then
another one to actually use it. Do it all in one trip.

Fallback is provided in case newer libc happens to be running on an older
kernel.

Submitted by:	Pawel Biernacki
Reported by:	kib, brooks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17282
2019-09-03 04:16:30 +00:00

760 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext

##
## Copyright (c) 2008-2010 Robert N. M. Watson
## All rights reserved.
##
## This software was developed at the University of Cambridge Computer
## Laboratory with support from a grant from Google, Inc.
##
## Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
## modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
## are met:
## 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
## notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
## 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
## notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
## documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
##
## THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
## ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
## IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
## ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
## FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
## DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
## OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
## HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
## LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
## OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
## SUCH DAMAGE.
##
## List of system calls enabled in capability mode, one name per line.
##
## Notes:
## - sys_exit(2), abort2(2) and close(2) are very important.
## - Sorted alphabetically, please keep it that way.
##
## $FreeBSD$
##
##
## Allow ACL and MAC label operations by file descriptor, subject to
## capability rights. Allow MAC label operations on the current process but
## we will need to scope __mac_get_pid(2).
##
__acl_aclcheck_fd
__acl_delete_fd
__acl_get_fd
__acl_set_fd
__mac_get_fd
#__mac_get_pid
__mac_get_proc
__mac_set_fd
__mac_set_proc
##
## Allow sysctl(2) as we scope internal to the call; this is a global
## namespace, but there are several critical sysctls required for almost
## anything to run, such as hw.pagesize. For now that policy lives in the
## kernel for performance and simplicity, but perhaps it could move to a
## proxying daemon in userspace.
##
__sysctl
__sysctlbyname
##
## Allow umtx operations as these are scoped by address space.
##
## XXRW: Need to check this very carefully.
##
_umtx_op
##
## Allow process termination using abort2(2).
##
abort2
##
## Allow accept(2) since it doesn't manipulate namespaces directly, rather
## relies on existing bindings on a socket, subject to capability rights.
##
accept
accept4
##
## Allow AIO operations by file descriptor, subject to capability rights.
##
aio_cancel
aio_error
aio_fsync
aio_read
aio_return
aio_suspend
aio_waitcomplete
aio_write
##
## audit(2) is a global operation, submitting to the global trail, but it is
## controlled by privilege, and it might be useful to be able to submit
## records from sandboxes. For now, disallow, but we may want to think about
## providing some sort of proxy service for this.
##
#audit
##
## Allow bindat(2).
##
bindat
##
## Allow capability mode and capability system calls.
##
cap_enter
cap_fcntls_get
cap_fcntls_limit
cap_getmode
cap_ioctls_get
cap_ioctls_limit
__cap_rights_get
cap_rights_limit
##
## Allow read-only clock operations.
##
clock_getres
clock_gettime
##
## Always allow file descriptor close(2).
##
close
closefrom
##
## Allow connectat(2).
##
connectat
##
## copy_file_range(2) reads from one descriptor and writes to the other.
##
copy_file_range
##
## cpuset(2) and related calls are limited to caller's own process/thread.
##
#cpuset
cpuset_getaffinity
#cpuset_getid
cpuset_setaffinity
#cpuset_setid
##
## Always allow dup(2) and dup2(2) manipulation of the file descriptor table.
##
dup
dup2
##
## Allow extended attribute operations by file descriptor, subject to
## capability rights.
##
extattr_delete_fd
extattr_get_fd
extattr_list_fd
extattr_set_fd
##
## Allow changing file flags, mode, and owner by file descriptor, subject to
## capability rights.
##
fchflags
fchmod
fchown
##
## For now, allow fcntl(2), subject to capability rights, but this probably
## needs additional scoping.
##
fcntl
##
## Allow fexecve(2), subject to capability rights. We perform some scoping,
## such as disallowing privilege escalation.
##
fexecve
##
## Allow flock(2), subject to capability rights.
##
flock
##
## Allow fork(2), even though it returns pids -- some applications seem to
## prefer this interface.
##
fork
##
## Allow fpathconf(2), subject to capability rights.
##
fpathconf
##
## Allow various file descriptor-based I/O operations, subject to capability
## rights.
##
freebsd11_fstat
freebsd11_fstatat
freebsd11_getdirentries
freebsd11_fstatfs
freebsd11_mknodat
freebsd6_ftruncate
freebsd6_lseek
freebsd6_mmap
freebsd6_pread
freebsd6_pwrite
##
## Allow querying file and file system state with fstat(2) and fstatfs(2),
## subject to capability rights.
##
fstat
fstatfs
##
## Allow further file descriptor-based I/O operations, subject to capability
## rights.
##
fsync
ftruncate
##
## Allow futimens(2) and futimes(2), subject to capability rights.
##
futimens
futimes
##
## Allow querying process audit state, subject to normal access control.
##
getaudit
getaudit_addr
getauid
##
## Allow thread context management with getcontext(2).
##
getcontext
##
## Allow directory I/O on a file descriptor, subject to capability rights.
## Originally we had separate capabilities for directory-specific read
## operations, but on BSD we allow reading the raw directory data, so we just
## rely on CAP_READ now.
##
getdents
getdirentries
##
## Allow querying certain trivial global state.
##
getdomainname
##
## Allow querying certain per-process resource limit state.
##
getdtablesize
##
## Allow querying current process credential state.
##
getegid
geteuid
##
## Allow querying certain trivial global state.
##
gethostid
gethostname
##
## Allow querying per-process timer.
##
getitimer
##
## Allow querying current process credential state.
##
getgid
getgroups
getlogin
##
## Allow querying certain trivial global state.
##
getpagesize
getpeername
##
## Allow querying certain per-process scheduling, resource limit, and
## credential state.
##
## XXXRW: getpgid(2) needs scoping. It's not clear if it's worth scoping
## getppid(2). getpriority(2) needs scoping. getrusage(2) needs scoping.
## getsid(2) needs scoping.
##
getpgid
getpgrp
getpid
getppid
getpriority
getresgid
getresuid
getrlimit
getrusage
getsid
##
## Allow getrandom
##
getrandom
##
## Allow querying socket state, subject to capability rights.
##
## XXXRW: getsockopt(2) may need more attention.
##
getsockname
getsockopt
##
## Allow querying the global clock.
##
gettimeofday
##
## Allow querying current process credential state.
##
getuid
##
## Allow ioctl(2), which hopefully will be limited by applications only to
## required commands with cap_ioctls_limit(2) syscall.
##
ioctl
##
## Allow querying current process credential state.
##
issetugid
##
## Allow kevent(2), as we will authorize based on capability rights on the
## target descriptor.
##
kevent
##
## Allow kill(2), as we allow the process to send signals only to himself.
##
kill
##
## Allow message queue operations on file descriptors, subject to capability
## rights.
## NOTE: Corresponding sysents are initialized in sys/kern/uipc_mqueue.c with
## SYF_CAPENABLED.
##
kmq_notify
kmq_setattr
kmq_timedreceive
kmq_timedsend
##
## Allow kqueue(2), we will control use.
##
kqueue
##
## Allow managing per-process timers.
##
ktimer_create
ktimer_delete
ktimer_getoverrun
ktimer_gettime
ktimer_settime
##
## We can't allow ktrace(2) because it relies on a global namespace, but we
## might want to introduce an fktrace(2) of some sort.
##
#ktrace
##
## Allow AIO operations by file descriptor, subject to capability rights.
##
lio_listio
##
## Allow listen(2), subject to capability rights.
##
## XXXRW: One might argue this manipulates a global namespace.
##
listen
##
## Allow I/O-related file descriptors, subject to capability rights.
##
lseek
##
## Allow simple VM operations on the current process.
##
madvise
mincore
minherit
mlock
mlockall
##
## Allow memory mapping a file descriptor, and updating protections, subject
## to capability rights.
##
mmap
mprotect
##
## Allow simple VM operations on the current process.
##
msync
munlock
munlockall
munmap
##
## Allow the current process to sleep.
##
nanosleep
##
## Allow querying the global clock.
##
ntp_gettime
##
## Allow AIO operations by file descriptor, subject to capability rights.
##
oaio_read
oaio_write
##
## Allow simple VM operations on the current process.
##
break
##
## Allow AIO operations by file descriptor, subject to capability rights.
##
olio_listio
##
## Operations relative to directory capabilities.
##
chflagsat
faccessat
fchmodat
fchownat
fstatat
futimesat
linkat
mkdirat
mkfifoat
mknodat
openat
readlinkat
renameat
symlinkat
unlinkat
funlinkat
utimensat
##
## Process descriptor-related system calls are allowed.
##
pdfork
pdgetpid
pdkill
#pdwait4 # not yet implemented
##
## Allow pipe(2).
##
pipe
pipe2
##
## Allow poll(2), which will be scoped by capability rights.
##
poll
ppoll
##
## Allow I/O-related file descriptors, subject to capability rights.
##
posix_fallocate
pread
preadv
##
## Allow access to profiling state on the current process.
##
profil
##
## Disallow ptrace(2) for now, but we do need debugging facilities in
## capability mode, so we will want to revisit this, possibly by scoping its
## operation.
##
#ptrace
##
## Allow I/O-related file descriptors, subject to capability rights.
##
pwrite
pwritev
read
readv
recv
recvfrom
recvmsg
##
## Allow real-time scheduling primitives to be used.
##
## XXXRW: These require scoping.
##
rtprio
rtprio_thread
##
## Allow simple VM operations on the current process.
##
sbrk
##
## Allow querying trivial global scheduler state.
##
sched_get_priority_max
sched_get_priority_min
##
## Allow various thread/process scheduler operations.
##
## XXXRW: Some of these require further scoping.
##
sched_getparam
sched_getscheduler
sched_rr_get_interval
sched_setparam
sched_setscheduler
sched_yield
##
## Allow I/O-related file descriptors, subject to capability rights.
## NOTE: Corresponding sysents are initialized in sys/netinet/sctp_syscalls.c
## with SYF_CAPENABLED.
##
sctp_generic_recvmsg
sctp_generic_sendmsg
sctp_generic_sendmsg_iov
sctp_peeloff
##
## Allow pselect(2) and select(2), which will be scoped by capability rights.
##
## XXXRW: But is it?
##
pselect
select
##
## Allow I/O-related file descriptors, subject to capability rights. Use of
## explicit addresses here is restricted by the system calls themselves.
##
send
sendfile
sendmsg
sendto
##
## Allow setting per-process audit state, which is controlled separately by
## privileges.
##
setaudit
setaudit_addr
setauid
##
## Allow setting thread context.
##
setcontext
##
## Allow setting current process credential state, which is controlled
## separately by privilege.
##
setegid
seteuid
setgid
##
## Allow use of the process interval timer.
##
setitimer
##
## Allow setpriority(2).
##
## XXXRW: Requires scoping.
##
setpriority
##
## Allow setting current process credential state, which is controlled
## separately by privilege.
##
setregid
setresgid
setresuid
setreuid
##
## Allow setting process resource limits with setrlimit(2).
##
setrlimit
##
## Allow creating a new session with setsid(2).
##
setsid
##
## Allow setting socket options with setsockopt(2), subject to capability
## rights.
##
## XXXRW: Might require scoping.
##
setsockopt
##
## Allow setting current process credential state, which is controlled
## separately by privilege.
##
setuid
##
## shm_open(2) is scoped so as to allow only access to new anonymous objects.
##
shm_open
##
## Allow I/O-related file descriptors, subject to capability rights.
##
shutdown
##
## Allow signal control on current process.
##
sigaction
sigaltstack
sigblock
sigpending
sigprocmask
sigqueue
sigreturn
sigsetmask
sigstack
sigsuspend
sigtimedwait
sigvec
sigwaitinfo
sigwait
##
## Allow creating new socket pairs with socket(2) and socketpair(2).
##
socket
socketpair
##
## Allow simple VM operations on the current process.
##
## XXXRW: Kernel doesn't implement this, so drop?
##
sstk
##
## Do allow sync(2) for now, but possibly shouldn't.
##
sync
##
## Always allow process termination with sys_exit(2).
##
sys_exit
##
## sysarch(2) does rather diverse things, but is required on at least i386
## in order to configure per-thread data. As such, it's scoped on each
## architecture.
##
sysarch
##
## Allow thread operations operating only on current process.
##
thr_create
thr_exit
thr_kill
##
## Disallow thr_kill2(2), as it may operate beyond the current process.
##
## XXXRW: Requires scoping.
##
#thr_kill2
##
## Allow thread operations operating only on current process.
##
thr_new
thr_self
thr_set_name
thr_suspend
thr_wake
##
## Allow manipulation of the current process umask with umask(2).
##
umask
##
## Allow submitting of process trace entries with utrace(2).
##
utrace
##
## Allow generating UUIDs with uuidgen(2).
##
uuidgen
##
## Allow I/O-related file descriptors, subject to capability rights.
##
write
writev
##
## Allow processes to yield(2).
##
yield