On 13/12/2018 04:02, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Wed, Dec 12, 2018 at 09:17:07AM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: >> The goal of this patch series is to control script interpretation. A >> new O_MAYEXEC flag used by sys_open() is added to enable userland script >> interpreter to delegate to the kernel (and thus the system security >> policy) the permission to interpret scripts or other files containing >> what can be seen as commands. > > I don't have a problem with the concept, but we're running low on O_ bits. > Does this have to be done before the process gets a file descriptor, > or could we have a new syscall? Since we're going to be changing the > interpreters anyway, it doesn't seem like too much of an imposition to > ask them to use: > > int verify_for_exec(int fd) > > instead of adding an O_MAYEXEC. > Adding a new syscall for this simple use case seems excessive. I think that the open/openat syscall familly are the right place to do an atomic open and permission check, the same way the kernel does for other file access. Moreover, it will be easier to patch upstream interpreters without the burden of handling a (new) syscall that may not exist on the running system, whereas unknown open flags are ignored.