On Fri, Jan 09, 2015 at 08:56:26PM +0000, Al Viro wrote:
On Fri, Jan 09, 2015 at 03:48:15PM -0500, Rich Felker wrote:
quoted
I think this is a case that needs to be fixed, though it's hard. The
normal correct usage for fexecve is to always pass an O_CLOEXEC file
descriptor, and the caller can't really be expected to know whether
the file is a script or not. We discussed workarounds before and one
idea I proposed was having fexecve provide a "one open only" magic
symlink in /proc/self/ to pass to the interpreter. It would behave
like an O_PATH file descriptor magic symlink in /proc/self/fd, but
would automatically cease to exist on the first open (at which point
the interpreter would have a real O_RDONLY file descriptor for the
underlying file).
For fsck sake, folks, if you have bloody /proc, you don't need that shite
at all! Just do execve on /proc/self/fd/n, and be done with that.
The sole excuse for merging that thing in the first place had been
"would anybody think of children^Wsclerotic^Whardened environments
where they have no /proc at all".
That doesn't work. With O_CLOEXEC, /proc/self/fd/n is already gone at
the time the interpreter runs, whether you're using fexecveat or
execve with "/proc/self/fd/n" to implement POSIX fexecve(). That's the
problem. This breaks the intended idiom for fexecve.
Rich