On Wed, Jun 30, 2021 at 09:07:56AM +0100, Dr. David Alan Gilbert wrote: > * Theodore Ts'o (tytso@xxxxxxx) wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 29, 2021 at 04:28:24PM -0400, Daniel Walsh wrote: > > > All this conversation is great, and I look forward to a better solution, but > > > if we go back to the patch, it was to fix an issue where the kernel is > > > requiring CAP_SYS_ADMIN for writing user Xattrs on link files and other > > > special files. > > > > > > The documented reason for this is to prevent the users from using XATTRS to > > > avoid quota. > > > > Huh? Where is it so documented? > > man xattr(7): > The file permission bits of regular files and directories are > interpreted differently from the file permission bits of special > files and symbolic links. For regular files and directories the > file permission bits define access to the file's contents, > while for device special files they define access to the device > described by the special file. The file permissions of symbolic > links are not used in access checks. All of this is true... > *** These differences would > allow users to consume filesystem resources in a way not > controllable by disk quotas for group or world writable special > files and directories.**** Anyone with group write access to a regular file can append to the file, and the blocks written will be charged the owner of the file. So it's perfectly "controllable" by the quota system; if you have group write access to a file, you can charge against the user's quota. This is Working As Intended. And the creation of device special files take the umask into account, just like regular files, so if you have a umask that allows newly created files to be group writeable, the same issue would occur for regular files as device files. Given that most users have a umask of 0077 or 0022, this is generally Not A Problem. I think I see the issue which drove the above text, though, which is that Linux's syscall(2) is creating symlinks which do not take umask into account; that is, the permissions are always mode ST_IFLNK|0777. Hence, it might be that the right answer is to remove this fairly arbitrary restriction entirely, and change symlink(2) so that it creates files which respects the umask. Posix and SUS doesn't specify what the permissions are that are used, and historically (before the advent of xattrs) I suspect since it didn't matter, no one cared about whether or not umask was applied. Some people might object to such a change arguing that with pre-existing file systems where there are symlinks which world-writeable, this might cause people to be able to charge up to 32k (or whatever the maximum size of the xattr supported by the file system) for each symlink. However, (a) very few people actually use quotas, and this would only be an issue for those users, and (b) the amount of quota "abuse" that could be carried out this way is small enough that I'm not sure it matters. - Ted