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Date:      Thu, 27 Jul 2000 08:15:48 +0200
From:      Mark Murray <mark@grondar.za>
To:        John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
Cc:        arch@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: How much security should ldconfig enforce? 
Message-ID:  <200007270615.IAA16104@grimreaper.grondar.za>
In-Reply-To: <XFMail.000726193613.jdp@polstra.com> ; from John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>  "Wed, 26 Jul 2000 19:36:13 MST."
References:  <XFMail.000726193613.jdp@polstra.com> 

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> Just kidding -- this is about ldconfig.  Last night I committed
> some security-related changes that somebody submitted to me.  The
> changes make ldconfig refuse to pay attention to directories which are
> world-writable or not owned by root.  In the commit message I also
> stated a desire to strengthen it further by disallowing group-writable
> directories.

I thought that was good :-)

> 1. It could allow anything, just like it did before I made my commit.

Not a good idea, but...

> 2. It could strictly enforce secure ownerships, groups, and
> permissions -- i.e., keep last night's commit and add group
> writability checking too.

...your correspondent had a point, however.

> 3. It could default to strictly secure but accept a command-line
> option to relax the constraints.  And an rc.conf knob could be added
> to control whether or not it was strict at boot time.

Could it relax constraints on a per-directory basis, so that folk
who want a shared lib dir with *this* privelige *here* can do that?

M
--
Mark Murray
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