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Old 08-07-2011, 02:22 PM   #1
jiangxi289
 
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Default Tiffany Charm Bracelets Hacking Linux Exposed

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Linux file locking mechanisms - Mandatory Locking
By Brian Hatch.
Summary: Mandatory Locking can enforce file locks at the kernel level.
Last week I described three locking functions - flock, lockf, and fcntl.
These functions, while managed by the Linux kernel, are known as advisory
locking mechanisms. Any program which doesn't bother checking to see
if a lock is in place will never know. The kernel won't stop it from
reading or writing the file.
This can be a problem when some programs correctly wait for an exclusive
lock on a file, but other programs out of your control access the same
files simultaneously without lock checks. If you don't have the code, it
may be difficult or impossible to wrap some sort of
external locking mechanism around the closed source program.
In these cases, you can enforce locking at the kernel level with mandatory
locks. Mandatory locking is implemented on a file-by-file basis. When a
program attempts to lock a file with lockf or fcntl
that has mandatory locking set, the kernel
will prevent all other programs from accessing the file.[1] Processes
which use flock will not trigger a mandatory lock.
To enable mandatory locking, you must first mount the filesystem with
the mand mount option:
# mount | grep /data /dev/hda7 on /data type ext3 (rw,noatime) # mount -oremount,mand /data # mount | grep /data /dev/hda7 on /data type ext3 (rw,mand,noatime)
Here I remounted the /data directory with the mand
option. (I should add mand to the appropriate /etc/fstab entry to
have this setting survive reboots as well.)
To prevent mandatory locking from taking over the entire filesystem,
only specifically tagged files will exhibit mandatory locks. The
way you define a file to be governed by mandatory locks is to
set the sgid (setgroupid) bit, but not the group execute bit. This
combination doesn't make any sense normally,[2] which is why it was
chosen for this purpose.
So, say we needed to enforce mandatory locking on the files d_*
in a directory, we'd do the following:
$ cd /data $ ls -l -rw-r--r-- 1 dbrand stuff 82756 May 28 14:07 a_5772.dat -rw-r--r-- 1 dbrand stuff 7788 May 28 14:07 a_9298.dat -rw-r--r-- 1 dbrand stuff 3325 May 28 14:07 d_0283.dat -rw-r--r-- 1 dbrand stuff 19288 May 28 14:07 d_5755.dat -rw-r--r-- 1 dbrand stuff 1224 May 28 14:07 d_5758.dat $ chmod g+s,g-x d* $ ls -l -rw-r--r-- 1 dbrand stuff 82756 May 28 14:07 a_5772.dat -rw-r--r-- 1 dbrand stuff 7788 May 28 14:07 a_9298.dat -rw-r-Sr-- 1 dbrand stuff 3325 May 28 14:07 d_0283.dat -rw-r-Sr-- 1 dbrand stuff 19288 May 28 14:07 d_5755.dat -rw-r-Sr-- 1 dbrand stuff 1224 May 28 14:07 d_5758.dat
Henceforth, the d_* files will exhibit mandatory locking.
The capital "S" in the output signifies that the sgid bit is set, but
there is no underlying execute ("x") bit, which is what we need.
Mandatory locks should only be used where you have problem software you
cannot modify to use locks correctly. Even with mandatory locks,
you can still have conflicts. If program A reads in a file, program
B locks, edits, and unlocks the file,Tiffany Charm Bracelets, and program A then writes out
what it originally read, you're still in a pickle. However in many cases,
mandatory locking can help prevent corruption of your data.
The other potential problem with mandatory locks is that nothing, not
even root-owned processes, can override the lock. The best root could
do would be to kill the process that has the lock on the file. This could
be particularly nasty if the mandatory-locked file is available via NFS
or other remotely-accessible filesystem,Pandora Schmuck How Little Do Users Read (Jakob N, as the entire fileserver process
itself will block until the lock is released.
NOTES:

[1] To be
exact, if a program has a read or shared lock on a file, no other
program can write to it. If a program has a create or exclusive lock
on a file, no other programs can read or compose to it.
[2] The sgid
bit is put on programs that should run with different group permissions than
the invoking user. When a program doesn't have the group execute
bit set, this situation is rather meaningless
Brian Hatch is Chief Hacker at Onsight, Inc and author of Hacking Linux Exposed and Building Linux VPNs.
He likes to periodically delete /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow and reboot
as the ultimate Linux locking system.
Brian can be reached at brian@hackinglinuxexposed.com.
Copyright Brian Hatch, 2003
This is the June 23, 2003 issue of the Linux Security: Tips, Tricks, and Hackery newsletter. If you wish to subscribe, visit or send email to Linux_Security-request@lists.onsight.com.
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