Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We need to explicitly define authorizations for allow_inactive and
allow_active. Otherwise one is getting "Access denied" when run from a
local console:
$ loginctl enable-linger
Could not enable linger: Access denied
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This reverts commit 483d8bbb4c0190f419bf9fba57fb0feb1a56bea6.
In [1] Michel Dänzer and Daniel Vetter wrote:
>> The scenario you describe isn't possible if the Wayland compositor
>> directly uses the KMS API of /dev/dri/card*, but it may be possible if
>> the Wayland compositor uses the fbdev API of /dev/fb* instead (e.g. if
>> weston uses its fbdev backend).
>
> Yeah, if both weston and your screen grabber uses native fbdev API you can
> now screenshot your desktop. And since fbdev has no concept of "current
> owner of the display hw" like the drm master, I think this is not fixable.
> At least not just in userspace. Also even with native KMS compositors
> fbdev still doesn't have the concept of ownership, which is why it doesn't
> bother clearing it's buffer before KMS takes over. I agree that this
> should be reverted or at least hidden better.
TBH, I think that privilege separation between processes running under the same
UID is tenuous. Even with drm, in common setups any user process can ptrace the
"current owner of the display" and call DROP_MASTER or do whatever. It *is*
possible to prevent that, e.g. by disabling ptrace using yama.ptrace_scope, or
selinux, and so on, but afaik this is not commonly done. E.g. all Fedora
systems pull in elfutils-default-yama-scope.rpm through dependencies which sets
yama.ptrace_scope=0. And even assuming that ptrace was disabled, it is trivial
to modify files on disk, communicate through dbus, etc; there is just to many
ways for a non-sandboxed process to interact maliciously with the display shell
to close them all off. To achieve real protection, some sort of sandboxing
must be implemented, and in that case there is no need to rely on access mode
on the device files, since much more stringent measures have to be implemented
anyway.
The situation is similar for framebuffer devices. It is common to add
framebuffer users to video group to allow them unlimited access to /dev/fb*.
Using uaccess would be better solution in that case. Also, since there is no
"current owner" limitation like in DRM, processes running under the same UID
should be able to access /proc/<pid-of-display-server>/fd/* and gain access to
the devices. Nevertheless, weston implements a suid wrapper to access the
devices and then drop privileges, and this patch would make this daemon
pointless. So if the weston developers feel that this change reduces security,
I prefer to revert it.
[1] https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/wayland-devel/2016-May/029017.html
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Desktop environments can keep this property up to date to allow
applications to easily track session's Lock status.
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That function doesn't draw anything on it's own, just returns a string, which
sometimes is more than one character. Also remove "DRAW_" prefix from character
names, TREE_* and ARROW and BLACK_CIRCLE are unambigous on their own, don't
draw anything, and are always used as an argument to special_glyph().
Rename "DASH" to "MDASH", as there's more than one type of dash.
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core: use an AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM socket for cgroup agent notification
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For similar reasons as the recent addition of a limit on sessions.
Note that we don't enforce a limit on inhibitors per-user currently, but
there's an implicit one, since each inhibitor takes up one fd, and fds are
limited via RLIMIT_NOFILE, and the limit on the number of processes per user.
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If we have a lot of simultaneous sessions we really shouldn't send the full
list of active sessions with each PropertyChanged message for user and seat
objects, as that can become quite substantial data, we probably shouldn't dump
on the bus on each login and logout.
Note that the global list of sessions doesn't send out changes like this
either, it only supports requesting the session list with ListSessions().
If cients want to get notified about sessions coming and going they should
subscribe to SessionNew and SessionRemoved signals, and clients generally do
that already.
This is kind of an API break, but then again the fact that this was included
was never documented.
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Let's make sure we process session and inhibitor pipe fds (that signal
sessions/inhibtors going away) at a higher priority
than new bus calls that might create new sessions or inhibitors. This helps
ensuring that the number of open sessions stays minimal.
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We really should put limits on all resources we manage, hence add one to the
number of concurrent sessions, too. This was previously unbounded, hence set a
relatively high limit of 8K by default.
Note that most PAM setups will actually invoke pam_systemd prefixed with "-",
so that the return code of pam_systemd is ignored, and the login attempt
succeeds anyway. On systems like this the session will be created but is not
tracked by systemd.
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The macro determines the right length of a AF_UNIX "struct sockaddr_un" to pass to
connect() or bind(). It automatically figures out if the socket refers to an
abstract namespace socket, or a socket in the file system, and properly handles
the full length of the path field.
This macro is not only safer, but also simpler to use, than the usual
offsetof() + strlen() logic.
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This way the user service will have a loginuid, and it will be inherited by
child services. This shouldn't change anything as far as systemd itself is
concerned, but is nice for various services spawned from by systemd --user
that expect a loginuid.
pam_loginuid(8) says that it should be enabled for "..., crond and atd".
user@.service should behave similarly to those two as far as audit is
concerned.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1328947#c28
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Make this an output flag instead, so that our function prototypes can lose one
parameter
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This ports over machinectl and loginctl to also use the new GetProcesses() bus
call to show the process tree of a container or login session. This is similar
to how systemctl already has been ported over in a previous commit.
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Kill user session scope by default
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zbyszek (1002)
Since: Tue 2016-04-12 23:11:46 EDT; 23min ago
State: active
Sessions: *3
Linger: yes
Unit: user-1002.slice
├─user@1002.service
│ └─init.scope
│ ├─38 /usr/lib/systemd/systemd --user
│ └─39 (sd-pam)
└─session-3.scope
├─ 31 login -- zbyszek
├─ 44 -bash
├─15076 loginctl user-status zbyszek
└─15077 less
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We enable lingering for anyone who wants this. It is still disabled by
default to avoid keeping long-running processes accidentally.
Admins might want to customize this policy on multi-user sites.
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Instead of KillOnlyUsers being a filter for KillUserProcesses, it can now be
used to specify users to kill, independently of the KillUserProcesses
setting. Having the settings orthogonal seems to make more sense. It also
makes KillOnlyUsers symmetrical to KillExcludeUsers.
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This ensures that users sessions are properly cleaned up after.
The admin can still enable or disable linger for specific users to allow
them to run processes after they log out. Doing that through the user
session is much cleaner and provides better control.
dbus daemon can now be run in the user session (with --enable-user-session,
added in 1.10.2), and most distributions opted to pick this configuration.
In the normal case it makes a lot of sense to kill remaining processes.
The exception is stuff like screen and tmux. But it's easy enough to
work around, a simple example was added to the man page in previous
commit. In the long run those services should integrate with the systemd
users session on their own.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=94508
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/2900
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v2:
- fix setting of kill_user_processes and
*_ignore_inhibited settings
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The coccinelle patch didn't work in some places, I have no idea why.
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numbers
And port all code over to use it.
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Add `--value` option to systemctl and loginctl to only print values
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With this option, systemctl will only print the rhs in show:
$ systemctl show -p Wants,After systemd-journald --value
systemd-journald.socket ...
systemd-journald-dev-log.socket ...
This is useful in scripts, because the need to call awk or similar
is removed.
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It's possible that sd_bus_creds_get_tty() fails and thus
scheduled_shutdown_tty is NULL in method_schedule_shutdown().
Fix logind_wall_tty_filter() to get along with that, by showing the message on
all TTYs, instead of crashing in strcmp().
https://launchpad.net/bugs/1553040
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Add support for 3D printers to uaccess (ID_3DPRINTER).
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This is to support 3D printers, CNCs, laser cutters, 3D scanners, etc.
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For example it allows weston to be started unprivileged.
Related discussion:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=73782
https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/wayland-devel/2015-May/022005.html
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1226680
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https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/2508#issuecomment-190901170
Maybe fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1308771.
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Many subsystems define own pager_open_if_enabled() function which
checks '--no-pager' command line argument and open pager depends
on its value. All implementations of pager_open_if_enabled() are
the same. Let's merger this function with pager_open() from the
shared/pager.c and remove pager_open_if_enabled() from all subsytems
to prevent code duplication.
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The deserialize_timestamp_value() is renamed timestamp_deserialize() to be more
consistent with dual_timestamp_deserialize()
And add the NULL check back on realtime and monotonic
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which is introduced in the ebf30a086d commit.
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This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that
stuff in every file.
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systemd-logind uses mkdir_label and label_fix functions without calling
first mac_selinux_init. This makes /run/user/$UID/ directories not
labelled correctly on an Arch Linux system using SELinux.
Fix this by calling mac_selinux_init("/run") early in systemd-logind.
This makes files created in /etc/udev/rules.d and /var/lib/systemd to be
labelled through transitions in the SELinux policy instead of using
setfscreatecon (with mac_selinux_create_file_prepare).
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Issue #2388 suggests the current TasksMax= setting for user processes is to low. Bump it to 12K. Also, bump the
container TasksMax= from 8K to 16K, so that it remains higher than the one for user processes.
(Compare: the kernel default limit for processes system-wide is 32K).
Fixes #2388
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... to determine if color output should be enabled. If the variable is not set,
fall back to using on_tty(). Also, rewrite existing code to use
colors_enabled() where appropriate.
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manager_{start,stop}_{slice,scope,unit} functions had an optional job
output parameter. But all callers specified job, so make the parameter
mandatory, add asserts. Also extract common job variable handling to
a helper function to avoid duplication.
Avoids gcc warning about job being unitialized.
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We requested various fields using SD_BUS_CREDS_AUGMENT but at least
sd_bus_creds_get_tty can fail with ENXIO, not setting the output variable.
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Compare errno with zero in a way that tells gcc that
(if the condition is true) errno is positive.
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gcc is confused by the common idiom of
return errno ? -errno : -ESOMETHING
and thinks a positive value may be returned. Replace this condition
with errno > 0 to help gcc and avoid many spurious warnings. I filed
a gcc rfe a long time ago, but it hard to say if it will ever be
implemented [1].
Both conventions were used in the codebase, this change makes things
more consistent. This is a follow up to bcb161b0230f.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=61846
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Also add a coccinelle receipt to help with such transitions.
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method_schedule_shutdown referenced org.freedesktop.login1.poweroff*
which is never registered in polkit.
Now refers to org.freedesktop.login1.power-off*
Signed-off-by: Joost Bremmer <toost.b@gmail.com>
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GLIB has recently started to officially support the gcc cleanup
attribute in its public API, hence let's do the same for our APIs.
With this patch we'll define an xyz_unrefp() call for each public
xyz_unref() call, to make it easy to use inside a
__attribute__((cleanup())) expression. Then, all code is ported over to
make use of this.
The new calls are also documented in the man pages, with examples how to
use them (well, I only added docs where the _unref() call itself already
had docs, and the examples, only cover sd_bus_unrefp() and
sd_event_unrefp()).
This also renames sd_lldp_free() to sd_lldp_unref(), since that's how we
tend to call our destructors these days.
Note that this defines no public macro that wraps gcc's attribute and
makes it easier to use. While I think it's our duty in the library to
make our stuff easy to use, I figure it's not our duty to make gcc's own
features easy to use on its own. Most likely, client code which wants to
make use of this should define its own:
#define _cleanup_(function) __attribute__((cleanup(function)))
Or similar, to make the gcc feature easier to use.
Making this logic public has the benefit that we can remove three header
files whose only purpose was to define these functions internally.
See #2008.
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This is a continuation of the previous include sort patch, which
only sorted for .c files.
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