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Subject: [PATCH] seclvl securityfs Newsgroups: gmane.linux.kernel.commits.head Date: 2005-09-13 19:03:54 GMT (3 years, 42 weeks, 5 hours and 13 minutes ago)
tree be66dc5e28c5510f6c3da99a4f8d9d9efe1360d6
parent b67dbf9d4c1987c370fd18fdc4cf9d8aaea604c2
author serue <at> us.ibm.com <serue <at> us.ibm.com> Sat, 09 Jul 2005 01:44:19 -0500
committer Chris Wright <chrisw <at> osdl.org> Sat, 09 Jul 2005 08:49:05 -0700
[PATCH] seclvl securityfs
Once again, the simple_attr in libfs was actually sufficient - I'd
thought the __attribute__(format(printk(1,2))) was more mysterious than
it really is.
At last, here is the full patch to make seclvl use securityfs.
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serue <at> us.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <chrisw <at> osdl.org>
--
seclvl.c | 228 +++++++++++++++++++--------------------------------------------
1 files changed, 70 insertions(+), 158 deletions(-)
Index: linux-2.6.13-rc1/security/seclvl.c
===================================================================
security/seclvl.c | 228 ++++++++++++++++--------------------------------------
1 files changed, 70 insertions(+), 158 deletions(-)
diff --git a/security/seclvl.c b/security/seclvl.c
--- a/security/seclvl.c
+++ b/security/seclvl.c
@@ -119,69 +119,6 @@ MODULE_PARM_DESC(hideHash, "When set to
} while (0)
/**
- * kobject stuff
- */
-
-struct subsystem seclvl_subsys;
-
-struct seclvl_obj {
- char *name;
- struct list_head slot_list;
- struct kobject kobj;
-};
-
-/**
- * There is a seclvl_attribute struct for each file in sysfs.
- *
- * In our case, we have one of these structs for "passwd" and another
- * for "seclvl".
- */
-struct seclvl_attribute {
- struct attribute attr;
- ssize_t(*show) (struct seclvl_obj *, char *);
- ssize_t(*store) (struct seclvl_obj *, const char *, size_t);
-};
-
-/**
- * When this function is called, one of the files in sysfs is being
- * written to. attribute->store is a function pointer to whatever the
- * struct seclvl_attribute store function pointer points to. It is
- * unique for "passwd" and "seclvl".
- */
-static ssize_t
-seclvl_attr_store(struct kobject *kobj,
- struct attribute *attr, const char *buf, size_t len)
-{
- struct seclvl_obj *obj = container_of(kobj, struct seclvl_obj, kobj);
- struct seclvl_attribute *attribute =
- container_of(attr, struct seclvl_attribute, attr);
- return attribute->store ? attribute->store(obj, buf, len) : -EIO;
-}
-
-static ssize_t
-seclvl_attr_show(struct kobject *kobj, struct attribute *attr, char *buf)
-{
- struct seclvl_obj *obj = container_of(kobj, struct seclvl_obj, kobj);
- struct seclvl_attribute *attribute =
- container_of(attr, struct seclvl_attribute, attr);
- return attribute->show ? attribute->show(obj, buf) : -EIO;
-}
-
-/**
- * Callback function pointers for show and store
- */
-static struct sysfs_ops seclvlfs_sysfs_ops = {
- .show = seclvl_attr_show,
- .store = seclvl_attr_store,
-};
-
-static struct kobj_type seclvl_ktype = {
- .sysfs_ops = &seclvlfs_sysfs_ops
-};
-
-decl_subsys(seclvl, &seclvl_ktype, NULL);
-
-/**
* The actual security level. Ranges between -1 and 2 inclusive.
*/
static int seclvl;
@@ -213,97 +150,44 @@ static int seclvl_sanity(int reqlvl)
}
/**
- * Called whenever the user reads the sysfs handle to this kernel
- * object
- */
-static ssize_t seclvl_read_file(struct seclvl_obj *obj, char *buff)
-{
- return snprintf(buff, PAGE_SIZE, "%d\n", seclvl);
-}
-
-/**
* security level advancement rules:
* Valid levels are -1 through 2, inclusive.
* From -1, stuck. [ in case compiled into kernel ]
* From 0 or above, can only increment.
*/
-static int do_seclvl_advance(int newlvl)
+static void do_seclvl_advance(void *data, u64 val)
{
- if (newlvl <= seclvl) {
- seclvl_printk(1, KERN_WARNING, "Cannot advance to seclvl "
- "[%d]\n", newlvl);
- return -EINVAL;
- }
+ int ret;
+ int newlvl = (int)val;
+
+ ret = seclvl_sanity(newlvl);
+ if (ret)
+ return;
+
if (newlvl > 2) {
seclvl_printk(1, KERN_WARNING, "Cannot advance to seclvl "
"[%d]\n", newlvl);
- return -EINVAL;
+ return;
}
if (seclvl == -1) {
seclvl_printk(1, KERN_WARNING, "Not allowed to advance to "
"seclvl [%d]\n", seclvl);
- return -EPERM;
+ return;
}
- seclvl = newlvl;
- return 0;
+ seclvl = newlvl; /* would it be more "correct" to set *data? */
+ return;
}
-/**
- * Called whenever the user writes to the sysfs handle to this kernel
- * object (seclvl/seclvl). It expects a single-digit number.
- */
-static ssize_t
-seclvl_write_file(struct seclvl_obj *obj, const char *buff, size_t count)
+static u64 seclvl_int_get(void *data)
{
- unsigned long val;
- if (count > 2 || (count == 2 && buff[1] != '\n')) {
- seclvl_printk(1, KERN_WARNING, "Invalid value passed to "
- "seclvl: [%s]\n", buff);
- return -EINVAL;
- }
- val = buff[0] - 48;
- if (seclvl_sanity(val)) {
- seclvl_printk(1, KERN_WARNING, "Illegal secure level "
- "requested: [%d]\n", (int)val);
- return -EPERM;
- }
- if (do_seclvl_advance(val)) {
- seclvl_printk(0, KERN_ERR, "Failure advancing security level "
- "to %lu\n", val);
- }
- return count;
+ return *(int *)data;
}
-/* Generate sysfs_attr_seclvl */
-static struct seclvl_attribute sysfs_attr_seclvl =
-__ATTR(seclvl, (S_IFREG | S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR), seclvl_read_file,
- seclvl_write_file);
+DEFINE_SIMPLE_ATTRIBUTE(seclvl_file_ops, seclvl_int_get, do_seclvl_advance, "%lld\n");
static unsigned char hashedPassword[SHA1_DIGEST_SIZE];
/**
- * Called whenever the user reads the sysfs passwd handle.
- */
-static ssize_t seclvl_read_passwd(struct seclvl_obj *obj, char *buff)
-{
- /* So just how good *is* your password?
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