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2015-02-13bus-proxy: ECONNRESET/ENOTCONN can hit us on every step, hence handle it on ↵Lennart Poettering
every step
2015-02-13bus-proxy: a few simplificationsLennart Poettering
2015-02-13bus-proxy: close each connection fd only onceLennart Poettering
After passing the fds over to the sd_bus object, we should forget them, so that we don't close them a second time when the object goes away.
2015-02-13bus-proxy: also consider ENOTCONN a clean termination conditionLennart Poettering
Sometimes, when we try to reply to messages we don't check return values. This means we might miss a ECONNRESET, and will get a ENOTCONN on next command. Treat both the same hence.
2015-02-13bus-proxy: whenever we cannot forward a message, report this back to caller, ↵Lennart Poettering
but don't exit Errors like EPERM from the kernel should certainly not be reason to exit. Let's try to be defensive here, and try to continue on most send errors, but possibly tell the sender about it.
2015-02-13bus-proxy: rename synthetic_reply_return_strv() to ↵Lennart Poettering
synthetic_reply_method_return_strv() That way it matches more closely the nomenclature of our other success reply calls.
2015-02-13bus-proxy: minor simplificationsLennart Poettering
2015-02-13bus-proxy: no need to negate error codes, log_error_errno() already does itLennart Poettering
2015-02-13bus-proxy: tell Coverity we don't care about these return valuesLennart Poettering
2015-02-13bus-proxy: we don't pointlessly abbreviate function namesLennart Poettering
It's fine to abbreviate local variables, but it's not OK to abbreviate function names needlessly. This is not an excercise in writing unreadable code.
2015-02-12include <poll.h> instead of <sys/poll.h>Thomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
include-what-you-use automatically does this and it makes finding unnecessary harder to spot. The only content of poll.h is a include of sys/poll.h so should be harmless.
2015-02-10bus-proxyd: initialize ioctl structure only onceLennart Poettering
2015-02-07bus-proxyd: fix 'ListQueuedOwners' callLukasz Skalski
Set proper kdbus_cmd_list object size, otherwise: dbus-send --system --dest=org.freedesktop.DBus --type=method_call \ print-reply / org.freedesktop.DBus.ListQueuedOwners string:org.freedesktop.systemd1 Error org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.InvalidArgs: Invalid argument
2015-02-05bus: sync with kdbus (ABI break)David Herrmann
2015-02-02remove unused variablesThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
2015-01-22Assorted format fixesZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
Types used for pids and uids in various interfaces are unpredictable. Too bad.
2015-01-18bus-proxy: don't pretend everyone is rootDavid Herrmann
While it's a lovely scenario, it's probably not really useful. Fix our GetConnectionUnixUser() to return the actual 'euid' which we asked for, not the possible uninitialized 'uid'.
2015-01-18bus: use EUID over UID and fix unix-credsDavid Herrmann
Whenever a process performs an action on an object, the kernel uses the EUID of the process to do permission checks and to apply on any newly created objects. The UID of a process is only used if someone *ELSE* acts on the process. That is, the UID of a process defines who owns the process, the EUID defines what privileges are used by this process when performing an action. Process limits, on the other hand, are always applied to the real UID, not the effective UID. This is, because a process has a user object linked, which always corresponds to its UID. A process never has a user object linked for its EUID. Thus, accounting (and limits) is always done on the real UID. This commit fixes all sd-bus users to use the EUID when performing privilege checks and alike. Furthermore, it fixes unix-creds to be parsed as EUID, not UID (as the kernel always takes the EUID on UDS). Anyone using UID (eg., to do user-accounting) has to fall back to the EUID as UDS does not transmit the UID.
2015-01-18bus-proxy: fake all UIDs/GIDs, not just the real UID/GIDDavid Herrmann
Make sure we tell the kernel to fake all UIDs/GIDs. Otherwise, the remote side has no chance of querying our effective UID (which is usually what they're interested in).
2015-01-18bus-proxy: fix bus-uid trackingDavid Herrmann
We need to implicitly allow HELLO from users with the same uid as the bus. Fix the bus-uid tracking to use the original uid, not the uid after privilege-dropping.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: don't print error-messages if we check multiple destsDavid Herrmann
If we test the policy against multiple destination names, we really should not print warnings if one of the names results in DENY. Instead, pass the whole array of names to the policy and let it deal with it.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: implement org.freedesktop.DBus.ReloadConfig()David Herrmann
Make sure to reload our xml policy configuration if requested via the bus.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: fix indentationDavid Herrmann
Fix whitespace indentation.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: drop privileges if run as rootDavid Herrmann
We cannot use "User=" in unit-files if we want to retain privileges. So make bus-proxy.c explicitly drop privileges. However, only do that if we're root, as there is no need to drop it on the user-bus.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: share policy between threadsDavid Herrmann
This implements a shared policy cache with read-write locks. We no longer parse the XML policy in each thread. This will allow us to easily implement ReloadConfig().
2015-01-17bus-proxy: set custom thread namesDavid Herrmann
Set thread-names to "p$PIDu$UID" and suffix with '*' if truncated. This helps debugging bus-proxy issues if we want to figure out which connections are currently open.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: turn into multi-threaded daemonDavid Herrmann
Instead of using Accept=true and running one proxy for each connection, we now run one proxy-daemon with a thread per connection. This will enable us to share resources like policies in the future.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: bring back systemd-stdio-bridgeDavid Herrmann
Now that we want to make bus-proxy multi-threaded, we have to bring back the systemd-stdio-bridge for our TCP use-cases.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: extract proxy into Proxy objectDavid Herrmann
Move all the proxy code into a "struct Proxy" object that can be used from multiple binaries. We now dropped SMACK as we have to refactor it to work properly. We can introduce it later on.
2015-01-17bus-proxy: refactor bus-creationDavid Herrmann
Move local and destination bus creation into a helper function. This further reduces the line count of main().
2015-01-15bus-proxyd: move synthesize_name_acquired()Daniel Mack
Move synthesize_name_acquired() to synthesize.c.
2015-01-15bus-proxy: factor out code for driver handling and message synthesisDaniel Mack
Move synthesize_*() into synthesize.c and bus_proxy_process_driver() into driver.c for better code separation.
2015-01-11bus-proxy: implement 'at_console'David Herrmann
The 'at_console' policy-category allows to apply policy-items to clients depending on whether they're run from within a valid user-session or not. We use sd_uid_get_seats() to check whether a user has a valid seat (which excludes remote-sessions like ssh).
2015-01-11bus-proxy: print message direction in policy logsDavid Herrmann
Make sure to print "dbus-1 to kernel" or "kernel to dbus-1" in policy logs to better diagnose the situation.
2015-01-11bus-proxy: fix receiver policy on dbus-1 to kdbus signalsDavid Herrmann
If a dbus-1 client sends a broadcasted signal via the bus-proxy to kdbus, the bus-proxy has no idea who the receiver is. Classic dbus-daemon has bus-access and can perform policy checks for each receiver, but we cant. Instead, we know the kernel will perform receiver policy checks for broadcasts, so we can skip the policy check and just push it into the kernel. This fixes wpa_supplicant which has DENY rules on receive_type=signal for non-root. As we never know the target, we always DENY all broadcasts from wpa_supplicant. Note that will still perform receiver-policy checks for signals that we get from the kernel back to us. In those cases, we know the receiver (which is us).
2015-01-11bus-proxy: fix swapped path/interface debug messagesDavid Herrmann
The policy debug messages swapped "path=" and "interface=", fix this.
2015-01-11bus-proxy: fix policy for expected/non-expected reply tagsDavid Herrmann
dbus-1 distinguishes expected and non-expected replies. An expected reply is a reply that is sent as answer to a previously forwarded method-call before the timeout fires. Those replies are, by default, forwarded and DENY policy tags are ignored on them (unless explicitly stated otherwise). We don't track reply-windows in the bus-proxy as the kernel already does this. Furthermore, the kernel prohibits any non-expected replies (which breaks dbus-1, but it was an odd feature, anyway). Therefore, skip policy checks on replies and always let the kernel deal with it! To be correct, we should still process DENY tags marked as send_expected_reply=true (which is *NOT* the default!). However, so far we don't parse those attributes, and no-one really uses it, so lets not implement it for now. It's marked as TODO if anyone feels like fixing it.
2015-01-09bus-proxy: make sure we have creds when two legacy clients talk to each otherLennart Poettering
2015-01-09bus-proxy-test: show parsed system/session policyLennart Poettering
2015-01-09bus-proxy: eat up "*" matches, they are pointlessLennart Poettering
2015-01-09bus-proxy: dbus-daemon implies that connections from UIDs that are identical ↵Lennart Poettering
to the bus owner should be allowed Hence, copy this behaviour for bus-proxy too.
2015-01-09bus-proxyd: xml - consider empty tags as recvKay Sievers
2015-01-09bus-proxy: make sure sure eavesdrop= XML attributes are properly handledLennart Poettering
2015-01-08bus-proxyd: fix EPERM on repliesDavid Herrmann
Imagine a kdbus peer sending a method-call without EXPECT_REPLY set through the proxy to a dbus1 peer. The proxy turns the missing EXPECT_REPLY flag into a dbus1 NO_REPLY_EXPECTED flag. However, if the receipient ignores that flag (valid dbus1 behavior) and sends a reply, the proxy will try to forward it to the original peer. This will fail with EPERM as the kernel didn't track the reply. We have two options now: Either we ignore EPERM for reply messages, or we track reply-windows in the proxy so we can properly ignore replies if EXPECT_REPLY wasn't set. This commit chose the first option: ignore EPERM for replies. The only down-side is that replies without matching method call will no longer be forwarded by the proxy. This works on dbus1, though. Nobody sane does this, so lets ignore it.
2015-01-08bus-proxyd: optimize replies if they're not requestedDavid Herrmann
If a caller does not request a reply, dont send it. This skips message creation and speeds up NO_REPLY_EXPECTED cases. Note that sd-bus still handles this case internally, but if we handle it in bus-proxyd, we can skip the whole message creation step.
2015-01-08bus-proxy: augment credentials from /proc for cmdline updateDavid Herrmann
dbus1 does not provide cmdline, so we have to augment our credentials from /proc to beautify the bus-proxyd cmdline. We dont use this for anything but beautification, so there shouldn't be any problems due to /proc pid-recycling races. This fixes bus-proxyd to no longer display 'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx' in its cmdline.
2015-01-07sd-bus: always catch name requests for the special names ↵Lennart Poettering
"org.freedesktop.DBus" and "org.freedesktop.DBus.Local" and refuse them
2015-01-05bus-proxyd: don't allow to acquire org.freedesktop.DBus nameLukasz Skalski
2015-01-05machined,bus-proxy: fix connecting to containersLennart Poettering
2014-12-30tree-wide: spelling fixesVeres Lajos
https://github.com/vlajos/misspell_fixer https://github.com/torstehu/systemd/commit/b6fdeb618cf2f3ce1645b3315f15f482710c7ffa Thanks to Torstein Husebo <torstein@huseboe.net>.