On Thu, Jul 24, 2014 at 08:21:38AM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > > > > Should we add E<SOMETHING> to be able to deny access to GRND_RANDOM or some > > future extension ? > > This might actually be needed sooner rather than later. There are > programs that use containers and intentionally don't pass /dev/random > through into the container. I know that Sandstorm does this, and I > wouldn't be surprised if other things (Docker?) do the same thing. I wouldn't add the error to the man page until we actually modify the kernel to add such a restriction. However, the thought crossed my mind a while back that perhaps the right answer is a cgroup controller which controls the rate at which a process is allowed to drain entropy from the /dev/random pool. This could be set to 0, or it could be set to N bits per unit time T, and if the process exceeded the value, it would just block or return EAGAIN. So instead of making it be just a binary "you have access" or "you don't", it would actually be a kernel resource that could be controlled just like disk bandwidth, networking bandwidth, memory, and CPU time. Then I decided that it was overkill, but for people who are trying to treat containers as a way to divide up OS resources between mutually suspicious customers in a fashion which is more efficient thatn using VM's, maybe it is something that someone will want to implement. - Ted -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html