platform_system_core/init/capabilities.cpp

230 lines
7.1 KiB
C++
Raw Normal View History

init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
// Copyright (C) 2016 The Android Open Source Project
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
#include "capabilities.h"
#include <sys/prctl.h>
#include <map>
#include <memory>
#include <android-base/logging.h>
#include <android-base/macros.h>
#define CAP_MAP_ENTRY(cap) { #cap, CAP_##cap }
namespace android {
namespace init {
static const std::map<std::string, int> cap_map = {
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(CHOWN),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(DAC_OVERRIDE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(DAC_READ_SEARCH),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(FOWNER),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(FSETID),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(KILL),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SETGID),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SETUID),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SETPCAP),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(LINUX_IMMUTABLE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(NET_BIND_SERVICE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(NET_BROADCAST),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(NET_ADMIN),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(NET_RAW),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(IPC_LOCK),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(IPC_OWNER),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_MODULE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_RAWIO),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_CHROOT),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_PTRACE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_PACCT),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_ADMIN),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_BOOT),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_NICE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_RESOURCE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_TIME),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYS_TTY_CONFIG),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(MKNOD),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(LEASE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(AUDIT_WRITE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(AUDIT_CONTROL),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SETFCAP),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(MAC_OVERRIDE),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(MAC_ADMIN),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(SYSLOG),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(WAKE_ALARM),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(BLOCK_SUSPEND),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(AUDIT_READ),
#if defined(__BIONIC__)
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(PERFMON),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(BPF),
CAP_MAP_ENTRY(CHECKPOINT_RESTORE),
#endif
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
};
#if defined(__BIONIC__)
static_assert(CAP_LAST_CAP == CAP_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE, "CAP_LAST_CAP is not CAP_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE");
#else
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
static_assert(CAP_LAST_CAP == CAP_AUDIT_READ, "CAP_LAST_CAP is not CAP_AUDIT_READ");
#endif
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
static bool ComputeCapAmbientSupported() {
#if defined(__ANDROID__)
return prctl(PR_CAP_AMBIENT, PR_CAP_AMBIENT_IS_SET, CAP_CHOWN, 0, 0) >= 0;
#else
return true;
#endif
}
static unsigned int ComputeLastValidCap() {
#if defined(__ANDROID__)
// Android does not support kernels < 3.8. 'CAP_WAKE_ALARM' has been present since 3.0, see
// http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/include/linux/capability.h?v=3.0#L360.
unsigned int last_valid_cap = CAP_WAKE_ALARM;
for (; prctl(PR_CAPBSET_READ, last_valid_cap, 0, 0, 0) >= 0; ++last_valid_cap);
// |last_valid_cap| will be the first failing value.
return last_valid_cap - 1;
#else
return CAP_LAST_CAP;
#endif
}
static bool DropBoundingSet(const CapSet& to_keep) {
unsigned int last_valid_cap = GetLastValidCap();
// When dropping the bounding set, attempt to drop capabilities reported at
// run-time, not at compile-time.
// If the run-time kernel is older than the compile-time headers, this
// avoids dropping an invalid capability. If the run-time kernel is newer
// than the headers, this guarantees all capabilities (even those unknown at
// compile time) will be dropped.
for (size_t cap = 0; cap <= last_valid_cap; ++cap) {
if (cap < to_keep.size() && to_keep.test(cap)) {
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
// No need to drop this capability.
continue;
}
if (cap_drop_bound(cap) == -1) {
PLOG(ERROR) << "cap_drop_bound(" << cap << ") failed";
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
static bool SetProcCaps(const CapSet& to_keep, bool add_setpcap) {
ScopedCaps caps(cap_init());
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
cap_clear(caps.get());
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
cap_value_t value[1];
for (size_t cap = 0; cap < to_keep.size(); ++cap) {
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
if (to_keep.test(cap)) {
value[0] = cap;
if (cap_set_flag(caps.get(), CAP_INHERITABLE, arraysize(value), value, CAP_SET) != 0 ||
cap_set_flag(caps.get(), CAP_PERMITTED, arraysize(value), value, CAP_SET) != 0) {
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
PLOG(ERROR) << "cap_set_flag(INHERITABLE|PERMITTED, " << cap << ") failed";
return false;
}
}
}
if (add_setpcap) {
value[0] = CAP_SETPCAP;
if (cap_set_flag(caps.get(), CAP_PERMITTED, arraysize(value), value, CAP_SET) != 0 ||
cap_set_flag(caps.get(), CAP_EFFECTIVE, arraysize(value), value, CAP_SET) != 0) {
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
PLOG(ERROR) << "cap_set_flag(PERMITTED|EFFECTIVE, " << CAP_SETPCAP << ") failed";
return false;
}
}
if (cap_set_proc(caps.get()) != 0) {
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
PLOG(ERROR) << "cap_set_proc(" << to_keep.to_ulong() << ") failed";
return false;
}
return true;
}
static bool SetAmbientCaps(const CapSet& to_raise) {
#if defined(__ANDROID__)
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
for (size_t cap = 0; cap < to_raise.size(); ++cap) {
if (to_raise.test(cap)) {
if (prctl(PR_CAP_AMBIENT, PR_CAP_AMBIENT_RAISE, cap, 0, 0) != 0) {
PLOG(ERROR) << "prctl(PR_CAP_AMBIENT, PR_CAP_AMBIENT_RAISE, " << cap << ") failed";
return false;
}
}
}
#endif
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
return true;
}
int LookupCap(const std::string& cap_name) {
auto e = cap_map.find(cap_name);
if (e != cap_map.end()) {
return e->second;
} else {
return -1;
}
}
bool CapAmbientSupported() {
static bool cap_ambient_supported = ComputeCapAmbientSupported();
return cap_ambient_supported;
}
unsigned int GetLastValidCap() {
static unsigned int last_valid_cap = ComputeLastValidCap();
return last_valid_cap;
}
init: Add support for ambient capabilities. Ambient capabilities are inherited in a straightforward way across execve(2): " If you are nonroot but you have a capability, you can add it to pA. If you do so, your children get that capability in pA, pP, and pE. For example, you can set pA = CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, and your children can automatically bind low-numbered ports. " This will allow us to get rid of the special meaning for AID_NET_ADMIN and AID_NET_RAW, and if desired, to reduce the use of file capabilities (which grant capabilities to any process that can execute the file). An additional benefit of the latter is that a single .rc file can specify all properties for a service, without having to rely on a separate file for file capabilities. Ambient capabilities are supported starting with kernel 4.3 and have been backported to all Android common kernels back to 3.10. I chose to not use Minijail here (though I'm still using libcap) for two reasons: 1-The Minijail code is designed to work in situations where the process is holding any set of capabilities, so it's more complex. The situation when forking from init allows for simpler code. 2-The way Minijail is structured right now, we would not be able to make the required SELinux calls between UID/GID dropping and other priv dropping code. In the future, it will make sense to add some sort of "hook" to Minijail so that it can be used in situations where we want to do other operations between some of the privilege-dropping operations carried out by Minijail. Bug: 32438163 Test: Use sample service. Change-Id: I3226cc95769d1beacbae619cb6c6e6a5425890fb
2016-10-27 16:33:03 +02:00
bool SetCapsForExec(const CapSet& to_keep) {
// Need to keep SETPCAP to drop bounding set below.
bool add_setpcap = true;
if (!SetProcCaps(to_keep, add_setpcap)) {
LOG(ERROR) << "failed to apply initial capset";
return false;
}
if (!DropBoundingSet(to_keep)) {
return false;
}
// If SETPCAP wasn't specifically requested, drop it now.
add_setpcap = false;
if (!SetProcCaps(to_keep, add_setpcap)) {
LOG(ERROR) << "failed to apply final capset";
return false;
}
// Add the capabilities to the ambient set so that they are preserved across
// execve(2).
// See http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/capabilities.7.html.
return SetAmbientCaps(to_keep);
}
bool DropInheritableCaps() {
ScopedCaps caps(cap_get_proc());
if (cap_clear_flag(caps.get(), CAP_INHERITABLE) == -1) {
PLOG(ERROR) << "cap_clear_flag(INHERITABLE) failed";
return false;
}
if (cap_set_proc(caps.get()) != 0) {
PLOG(ERROR) << "cap_set_proc() failed";
return false;
}
return true;
}
} // namespace init
} // namespace android