On Sun, Nov 18, 2018 at 10:23:36PM +0100, Christian Brauner wrote: > On Sun, Nov 18, 2018 at 12:54:10PM -0800, Daniel Colascione wrote: > > On Sun, Nov 18, 2018 at 12:43 PM, Christian Brauner > > <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Sun, Nov 18, 2018 at 01:28:41PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > > >> > > >> > > >> > On Nov 18, 2018, at 12:44 PM, Daniel Colascione <dancol@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > > >> > That is, I'm proposing an API that looks like this: > > >> > > > >> > int process_kill(int procfs_dfd, int signo, const union sigval value) > > >> > > > >> > If, later, process_kill were to *also* accept process-capability FDs, > > >> > nothing would break. > > >> > > >> Except that this makes it ambiguous to the caller as to whether their current creds are considered. So it would need to be a different syscall or at least a flag. Otherwise a lot of those nice theoretical properties go away. > > > > > > I can add a flag argument > > > int process_signal(int procfs_dfd, int signo, siginfo_t *info, int flags) > > > The way I see it process_signal() should be equivalent to kill(pid, signal) for now. > > > That is siginfo_t is cleared and set to: > > > > > > info.si_signo = sig; > > > info.si_errno = 0; > > > info.si_code = SI_USER; > > > info.si_pid = task_tgid_vnr(current); > > > info.si_uid = from_kuid_munged(current_user_ns(), current_uid()); > > > > That makes sense. I just don't want to get into a situation where > > callers feel that they *have* to use the PID-based APIs to send a > > signal because process_kill doesn't offer some bit of functionality. > > Yeah. > > > > > Are you imagining something like requiring info t be NULL unless flags > > contains some "I have a siginfo_t" value? > > Well, I was actually thinking about something like: > > /** > * sys_process_signal - send a signal to a process trough a process file descriptor > * @fd: the file descriptor of the process > * @sig: signal to be sent > * @info: the signal info > * @flags: future flags to be passed > */ > SYSCALL_DEFINE4(process_signal, int, fd, int, sig, siginfo_t __user *, info, > int, flags) > { > struct pid *pid; > struct fd *f; > kernel_siginfo_t kinfo; > > /* Do not allow users to pass garbage. */ > if (flags) > return -EINVAL; > > int ret = __copy_siginfo_from_user(sig, &kinfo, info); > if (unlikely(ret)) > return ret; > > /* For now, enforce that caller's creds are used. */ > kinfo.si_pid = task_tgid_vnr(current); > kinfo.si_uid = from_kuid_munged(current_user_ns(), current_uid()); > > if (signal_impersonates_kernel(kinfo)) > return -EPERM; > > f = fdget(fd); > if (!f.file) > return -EBADF; > > pid = f.file->private_data; > if (!pid) > return -EBADF; > > return kill_pid_info(sig, kinfo, pid); > } Just jotted this down here briefly. This will need an fput and so on obvs. > > > > > BTW: passing SI_USER to rt_sigqueueinfo *should* as long as the > > passed-in si_pid and si_uid match what the kernel would set them to in > > the kill(2) case. The whole point of SI_USER is that the recipient > > knows that it can trust the origin information embedded in the > > siginfo_t in the signal handler. If the kernel verifies that a signal > > sender isn't actually lying, why not let people send SI_USER with > > rt_sigqueueinfo?