On Wed, Sep 25, 2024 at 09:09:18PM -0500, Eric W. Biederman wrote: > Tycho Andersen <tycho@tycho.pizza> writes: > > > Yep, I did this for the test above, and it worked fine: > > > > if (bprm->fdpath) { > > /* > > * If fdpath was set, execveat() made up a path that will > > * probably not be useful to admins running ps or similar. > > * Let's fix it up to be something reasonable. > > */ > > struct path root; > > char *path, buf[1024]; > > > > get_fs_root(current->fs, &root); > > path = __d_path(&bprm->file->f_path, &root, buf, sizeof(buf)); > > > > __set_task_comm(me, kbasename(path), true); > > } else { > > __set_task_comm(me, kbasename(bprm->filename), true); > > } > > > > obviously we don't want a stack allocated buffer, but triggering on > > ->fdpath != NULL seems like the right thing, so we won't need a flag > > either. > > > > The question is: argv[0] or __d_path()? > > You know. I think we can just do: > > BUILD_BUG_ON(DNAME_INLINE_LEN >= TASK_COMM_LEN); > __set_task_comm(me, bprm->file->f_path.dentry->d_name.name, true); > > Barring cache misses that should be faster and more reliable than what > we currently have and produce the same output in all of the cases we > like, and produce better output in all of the cases that are a problem > today. > > Does anyone see any problem with that? Nice, this works great. We need to drop the BUILD_BUG_ON() since it is violated in today's tree, but I think this is safe to do anyway since __set_task_comm() does strscpy_pad(tsk->comm, buf, sizeof(tsk->comm)). I will respin with this and dropping the flag. Tycho