On Tue, May 09, 2017 at 02:17:46PM -0700, Eric Biggers wrote: > 1.) Privacy implications. Say the filesystem is being shared between multiple > users, and one user unpacks foo.tar.gz into their home directory, which > they've set to mode 700 to hide from other users. Because of this new > ioctl, all users will be able to see every (inode number, size in blocks) > pair that was added to the filesystem, as well as the exact layout of the > physical block allocations which might hint at how the files were created. > If there is a known "fingerprint" for the unpacked foo.tar.gz in this > regard, its presence on the filesystem will be revealed to all users. And > if any filesystems happen to prefer allocating blocks near the containing > directory, the directory the files are in would likely be revealed too. Unix/Linux has historically not been terribly concerned about trying to protect this kind of privacy between users. So for example, in order to do this, you would have to call GETFSMAP continously to track this sort of thing. Someone who wanted to do this could probably get this information (and much, much more) by continuously running "ps" to see what processes are running. (I will note. wryly, that in the bad old days, when dozens of users were sharing a one MIPS Vax/780, it was considered a *good* thing that social pressure could be applied when it was found that someone was running a CPU or memory hogger on a time sharing system. The privacy right of someone running "xtrek" to be able to hide this from other users on the system was never considered important at all. :-) Fortunately, the days of timesharing seem to well behind us. For those people who think that containers are as secure as VM's (hah, hah, hah), it might be that best way to handle this is to have a mount option that requires root access to this functionality. For those people who really care about this, they can disable access. Cheers, - Ted