On Thu, Apr 23, 2020 at 04:12:53AM +0300, Dmitry V. Levin wrote: > On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 10:19:49PM -0700, Josh Triplett wrote: > > Some applications want to prevent the usual "lowest available fd" > > allocation from allocating certain file descriptors. For instance, they > > may want to prevent allocation of a closed fd 0, 1, or 2 other than via > > dup2/dup3, or reserve some low file descriptors for other purposes. > > > > Add a prctl to increase the minimum fd and return the previous minimum. > > > > System calls that allocate a specific file descriptor, such as > > dup2/dup3, ignore this minimum. > > > > exec resets the minimum fd, to prevent one program from interfering with > > another program's expectations about fd allocation. > > Please make this aspect properly documented in "Effect on process > attributes" section of execve(2) manual page. Done. I'll include updated manpage patches in v6. > > +unsigned int increase_min_fd(unsigned int num) > > +{ > > + struct files_struct *files = current->files; > > + unsigned int old_min_fd; > > + > > + spin_lock(&files->file_lock); > > + old_min_fd = files->min_fd; > > + files->min_fd += num; > > + spin_unlock(&files->file_lock); > > + return old_min_fd; > > +} > > If it's "increase", there should be an overflow check. > Otherwise it's "assign" rather than "increase". I'll add a check in v6, to make sure that the value cannot overflow into the errno range. (Note that this is not security-sensitive, it's just providing a footgun-resistant interface. It should absolutely check, though.) - Josh Triplett