On Tue May 21, 2024 at 12:13 AM EEST, Tycho Andersen wrote: > On Mon, May 20, 2024 at 12:25:27PM -0700, Jonathan Calmels wrote: > > On Mon, May 20, 2024 at 07:30:14AM GMT, Tycho Andersen wrote: > > > there is an ongoing effort (started at [0]) to constify the first arg > > > here, since you're not supposed to write to it. Your usage looks > > > correct to me, so I think all it needs is a literal "const" here. > > > > Will do, along with the suggestions from Jarkko > > > > > > + struct ctl_table t; > > > > + unsigned long mask_array[2]; > > > > + kernel_cap_t new_mask, *mask; > > > > + int err; > > > > + > > > > + if (write && (!capable(CAP_SETPCAP) || > > > > + !capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN))) > > > > + return -EPERM; > > > > > > ...why CAP_SYS_ADMIN? You mention it in the changelog, but don't > > > explain why. > > > > No reason really, I was hoping we could decide what we want here. > > UMH uses CAP_SYS_MODULE, Serge mentioned adding a new cap maybe. > > I don't have a strong preference between SETPCAP and a new capability, > but I do think it should be just one. SYS_ADMIN is already god mode > enough, IMO. Sometimes I think would it make more sense to invent something completely new like capabilities but more modern and robust, instead of increasing complexity of a broken mechanism (especially thanks to CAP_MAC_ADMIN). I kind of liked the idea of privilege tokens both in Symbian and Maemo (have been involved professionally in both). Emphasis on the idea not necessarily on implementation. Not an LSM but like something that you could use in the place of POSIX caps. Probably quite tedious effort tho because you would need to pull the whole industry with the new thing... BR, Jarkko