On Thu, 8 Jul 2010, David P. Quigley wrote: > > The maximum security label size on Linux is: > > > > #define XATTR_SIZE_MAX 65536 > > > > Why arbitrarily limit this over the network? > > Because there is no easy way not to. The specification doesn't specify a > limit to label size in the IETF draft. However there is no way to do > allocation of the memory needed to store the label where we first get > access to its size. We tried this before and it failed. When I asked > trond about it he said doing memory allocation in the rpc context isn't > allowed. In the NFSv3 code, the workaround I've been using is to always allocate 64k, but the correct way of doing this apparently is to use the page cache, as is used for ACLs and symlinks. > For the most part what would make this label size inadequate would be > the MLS component. There are some cases where people want every other > compartment or something crazy like that. In terms of a normal label > though 4096 should be more than enough. Yes, but we should not unnecessarily limit the network protocol when something is valid and possible in the local implementation (which is ~64k under Linux). > Just to put this in perspective the string below is 4096 a's. A security label include just about anything, e.g. an x509 certificate, or a base64 encoded image. In the Linux implementation, if we can store a local label up to 64k, then we should try and ensure that it can be conveyed via NFS. - James -- James Morris <jmorris@xxxxxxxxx> -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html