In message <20071022082231.GA15132@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Christoph Hellwig writes: > On Sun, Oct 21, 2007 at 07:51:14PM -0400, Erez Zadok wrote: > > From: Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > ERROR: "security_inode_permission" [fs/unionfs/unionfs.ko] undefined! > > ERROR: "security_file_ioctl" [fs/unionfs/unionfs.ko] undefined! > > > > Need these back. > > These should never used by modules. Why? Are you concerned that the security policy may change after a module is loaded? My understanding of the security code is that it should handle this, even if people call security_*() functions directly. When I look at the security_* functions in security.c, to me they very much smell like global wrappers that others can call, b/c they refer to private/global ops vectors that one should not be referencing directly. For example: int security_file_ioctl(struct file *file, unsigned int cmd, unsigned long arg) { return security_ops->file_ioctl(file, cmd, arg); } > You'll need to use and/or introduce > vfs_ helpers that do proper security checks before calling the methods. I can probably get rid of having unionfs call security_inode_permission, by calling permission() myself and carefully post-process its return code (unionfs needs to "ignore" EROFS initially, to allow copyup to take place). But security_file_ioctl doesn't have any existing helper I can call. I can introduce a trivial vfs_security_file_ioctl wrapper to security_file_ioctl, but what about the already existing *19* exported security_* functions in security/security.c? Do you want to see simple wrappers for all of them? It seems redundant to add a one-line wrapper around an already one-line function around security_ops->XXX. Plus, some of the existing exported security_* functions are file-system related, others are networking, etc. So we'll need wrappers whose names are prefixed appropriately: vfs_*, net_*, etc. Thanks, Erez. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html