On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 2:33 AM Christian Brauner <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The kill() syscall operates on process identifiers. After a process has > exited its pid can be reused by another process. If a caller sends a signal > to a reused pid it will end up signaling the wrong process. This issue has > often surfaced and there has been a push [1] to address this problem. > > A prior patch has introduced the ability to get a file descriptor > referencing struct pid by opening /proc/<pid>. This guarantees a stable > handle on a process which can be used to send signals to the referenced > process. Discussion has shown that a dedicated syscall is preferable over > ioctl()s. Thus, the new syscall procfd_signal() is introduced to solve > this problem. It operates on a process file descriptor. > The syscall takes an additional siginfo_t and flags argument. If siginfo_t > is NULL then procfd_signal() behaves like kill() if it is not NULL it > behaves like rt_sigqueueinfo. > The flags argument is added to allow for future extensions of this syscall. > It currently needs to be passed as 0. A few questions. First: you've made this work on /proc/PID, but should it also work on /proc/PID/task/TID to send signals to a specific thread? > +bool proc_is_procfd(const struct file *file) > +{ > + return d_is_dir(file->f_path.dentry) && > + (file->f_op == &proc_tgid_base_operations); > +} Maybe rename to proc_is_tgid_procfd() to leave room for proc_is_tid_procfd()? > + if (info) { > + ret = __copy_siginfo_from_user(sig, &kinfo, info); > + if (unlikely(ret)) > + goto err; > + /* > + * Not even root can pretend to send signals from the kernel. > + * Nor can they impersonate a kill()/tgkill(), which adds > + * source info. > + */ > + ret = -EPERM; > + if ((kinfo.si_code >= 0 || kinfo.si_code == SI_TKILL) && > + (task_pid(current) != pid)) > + goto err; Is the exception for signaling yourself actually useful here?