On czw, 2015-07-30 at 16:30 -0500, Serge E. Hallyn wrote: > On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 12:04:35PM +0200, Lukasz Pawelczyk wrote: > > @@ -969,6 +982,7 @@ static int userns_install(struct nsproxy > > *nsproxy, struct ns_common *ns) > > { > > struct user_namespace *user_ns = to_user_ns(ns); > > struct cred *cred; > > + int err; > > > > /* Don't allow gaining capabilities by reentering > > * the same user namespace. > > @@ -986,6 +1000,10 @@ static int userns_install(struct nsproxy > > *nsproxy, struct ns_common *ns) > > if (!ns_capable(user_ns, CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) > > return -EPERM; > > > > + err = security_userns_setns(nsproxy, user_ns); > > + if (err) > > + return err; > > So at this point the LSM thinks current is in the new ns. If > prepare_creds() fails below, should it be informed of that? > (Or am I over-thinking this?) > > > + > > cred = prepare_creds(); > > if (!cred) > > return -ENOMEM; Hmm, the use case for this hook I had in mind was just to allow or disallow the operation based on the information passed in arguments. Not to register the current in any way so LSM can think it is or isn't in the new namespace. I think that any other LSM check that would like to know in what namespace the current is, would just check that from current's creds. Not use some stale and duplicated information the above hook could have registered. I see no reason for this hook to change the LSM state, only to answer the question: allowed/disallowed (eventually return an error cause it is unable to give an answer which falls into the disallow category). -- Lukasz Pawelczyk Samsung R&D Institute Poland Samsung Electronics -- 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