On 3/1/19 3:53 PM, Tycho Andersen wrote: > On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 02:25:55PM +0100, Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) wrote: >>> 7. The monitoring process can use the information in the >>> 'struct seccomp_notif' to make a determination about the >>> system call being made by the target process. This >>> structure includes a 'data' field that is the same >>> 'struct seccomp_data' that is passed to a BPF filter. >>> >>> In addition, the monitoring process may make use of other >>> information that is available from user space. For example, >>> it may inspect the memory of the target process (whose PID >>> is provided in the 'struct seccomp_notif') using >>> /proc/PID/mem, which includes inspecting the values >>> pointed to by system call arguments (whose location is >>> available 'seccomp_notif.data.args). However, when using >>> the target process PID in this way, one must guard against >>> PID re-use race conditions using the seccomp() >>> SECCOMP_IOCTL_NOTIF_ID_VALID operation. >>> >>> 8. Having arrived at a decision about the target process's >>> system call, the monitoring process can inform the kernel >>> of its decision using the operation >>> >>> ioctl(listenfd, SECCOMP_IOCTL_NOTIF_SEND, respptr) >>> >>> where the third argument is a pointer to a >>> 'struct seccomp_notif_resp'. [Some more details >>> needed here, but I still don't yet understand fully >>> the semantics of the 'error' and 'val' fields.] >> >> So clearly, I misunderstood these last two steps. >> >> (7) is something like: discover information in userspace >> as required; perform userspace actions if appropriate >> (perhaps doing the system call operation "on behalf of" the >> target process). >> >> >> (8) is something like: >> set 'error' and 'val' to return info to the target process: >> * error != 0 ==> make it look like the syscall failed, >> with 'errno' set to that value That piece should be amended: error < 0 ==> make it look like syscall failed. error > 0 ==> make it look like the syscall succeeded and returned 'error' Is that really supposed to happen? >> * error == 0 ==> make it look like the syscall succeeded >> and returned 'val' Thanks, Michael -- Michael Kerrisk Linux man-pages maintainer; http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ Linux/UNIX System Programming Training: http://man7.org/training/