On Thu, Jul 01, 2021 at 09:48:33AM +0100, Dr. David Alan Gilbert wrote: > * Theodore Ts'o (tytso@xxxxxxx) wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 30, 2021 at 04:01:42PM +0100, Dr. David Alan Gilbert wrote: > > > > > > Even if you fix symlinks, I don't think it fixes device nodes or > > > anything else where the permissions bitmap isn't purely used as the > > > permissions on the inode. > > > > I think we're making a mountain out of a molehill. Again, very few > > people are using quota these days. And if you give someone write > > access to a 8TB disk, do you really care if they can "steal" 32k worth > > of space (which is the maximum size of an xattr, enforced by the VFS). > > > > OK, but what about character mode devices? First of all, most users > > don't have access to huge number of devices, but let's assume > > something absurd. Let's say that a user has write access to *1024* > > devices. (My /dev has 233 character mode devices, and I have write > > access to well under a dozen.) > > > > An 8TB disk costs about $200. So how much of the "stolen" quota space > > are we talking about, assuming the user has access to 1024 devices, > > and the file system actually supports a 32k xattr. > > > > 32k * 1024 * $200 / 8TB / (1024*1024*1024) = $0.000763 = 0.0763 cents > > > > A 2TB SSD is less around $180, so even if we calculate the prices > > based on SSD space, we're still talking about a quarter of a penny. > > > > Why are we worrying about this? > > I'm not worrying about storage cost, but we would need to define what > the rules are on who can write and change a user.* xattr on a device > node. It doesn't feel sane to make it anyone who can write to the > device; then everyone can start leaving droppings on /dev/null. Looks like tmpfs/devtmpfs might not support setting user.* xattrs. So devices nodes there should not be a problem. # touch /dev/foo.txt # setfattr -n "user.foo" -v "bar" /dev/foo.txt setfattr: /dev/foo.txt: Operation not supported Vivek > > The other evilness I can imagine, is if there's a 32k limit on xattrs on > a node, an evil user could write almost 32k of junk to the node > and then break the next login that tries to add an acl or breaks the > next relabel. > > Dave > > > - Ted > > > -- > Dr. David Alan Gilbert / dgilbert@xxxxxxxxxx / Manchester, UK >