On Mon, Mar 25, 2019 at 9:40 PM Jonathan Kowalski <bl0pbl33p@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Mar 25, 2019 at 8:34 PM Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > [...SNIP...] > > > > Please don't do that. /proc/$pid/fd refers to the set of file > > descriptors the process has open, and semantically doesn't have much > > to do with the identity of the process. If you want to have a procfs > > directory entry for getting a pidfd, please add a new entry. (Although > > I don't see the point in adding a new procfs entry for this when you > > could instead have an ioctl or syscall operating on the procfs > > directory fd.) > > There is no new entry. What I was saying (and I should have been > clearer) is that the existing entry for the fd when open'd with > O_DIRECTORY makes the kernel resolve the symlink to /proc/<PID> of the > process it maps to, so it would become: > > int dirfd = open("/proc/self/fd/3", O_DIRECTORY|O_CLOEXEC); That still seems really weird. This magically overloads O_DIRECTORY, which means "fail if the thing is not a directory", to suddenly have an entirely different meaning for one magical special type of file. On top of that, unlike an ioctl or a new syscall, it doesn't convey explicit intent and increases the risk of confused deputy issues. > This also means you cannot cross the filesystem boundry, the said > process needs to have a visible entry (which would mean hidepid= and > gid= based access controls are honored), and you can only open the > dirfd of a process in the current ns (as the PID will not map to an > existent process if the pidfd maps to a process not in the same or > children pid ns, in fdinfo it lists -1 in the pid field (we might not > even need fdinfo anymore)). AFAICS that doesn't have anything to do with whether you do this as a syscall, as an ioctl, or as a jumped symlink. The kernel would have to do the same security checks in any of those cases - only a classic, non-jumped symlink would implicitly go through the existing permission checks. And if you implement this with a non-jumped symlink, you get races.