Hello Will. I missed the previous discussions, and I don't think I can read all these emails now. So I apologize in advance if this was already discussed. On 02/24, Will Drewry wrote: > > struct seccomp { > int mode; > + struct seccomp_filter *filter; > }; Minor nit, it seems that the new member can be "ifdef CONFIG_SECCOMP_FILTER" > +static long seccomp_attach_filter(struct sock_fprog *fprog) > +{ > + struct seccomp_filter *filter; > + unsigned long fp_size = fprog->len * sizeof(struct sock_filter); > + long ret; > + > + if (fprog->len == 0 || fprog->len > BPF_MAXINSNS) > + return -EINVAL; OK, this limits the memory PR_SET_SECCOMP can use. But, > + /* > + * If there is an existing filter, make it the prev and don't drop its > + * task reference. > + */ > + filter->prev = current->seccomp.filter; > + current->seccomp.filter = filter; > + return 0; this doesn't limit the number of filters, looks like a DoS. What if the application simply does prctl(PR_SET_SECCOMP, dummy_filter) in an endless loop? > +static struct seccomp_filter *get_seccomp_filter(struct seccomp_filter *orig) > +{ > + if (!orig) > + return NULL; > + /* Reference count is bounded by the number of total processes. */ > + atomic_inc(&orig->usage); > + return orig; > +} > ... > +void copy_seccomp(struct seccomp *child, const struct seccomp *parent) > +{ > + /* Other fields are handled by dup_task_struct. */ > + child->filter = get_seccomp_filter(parent->filter); > +} This is purely cosmetic, but imho looks a bit confusing. We do not copy seccomp->mode and this is correct, it was already copied implicitely. So why do we copy ->filter? This is not "symmetrical", afaics you can simply do void copy_seccomp(struct seccomp *child) { if (child->filter) atomic_inc(child->filter->usage); But once again, this is cosmetic, feel free to ignore. Oleg. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html