ebiederm@xmission.com (Eric W. Biederman) writes:
Mickaël Salaün [off-list ref] writes:
quoted
From: Kees Cook <redacted>
Change uselib(2)' S_ISREG() error return to EACCES instead of EINVAL so
the behavior matches execve(2), and the seemingly documented value.
The "not a regular file" failure mode of execve(2) is explicitly
documented[1], but it is not mentioned in uselib(2)[2] which does,
however, say that open(2) and mmap(2) errors may apply. The documentation
for open(2) does not include a "not a regular file" error[3], but mmap(2)
does[4], and it is EACCES.
Do you have enough visibility into uselib to be certain this will change
will not cause regressions?
My sense of uselib is that it would be easier to remove the system call
entirely (I think it's last use was in libc5) than to validate that a
change like this won't cause problems for the users of uselib.
For the kernel what is important are real world users and the manpages
are only important as far as they suggest what the real world users
do.
Hmm.
My apologies. After reading the next patch I see that what really makes
this safe is: 73601ea5b7b1 ("fs/open.c: allow opening only regular files
during execve()").
As in practice this change has already been made and uselib simply
can not reach the !S_ISREG test.
It might make sense to drop this patch or include that reference
in the next posting of this patch.
Eric