diff options
author | Kevin F. Quinn <kevquinn@gentoo.org> | 2006-12-02 11:33:04 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Kevin F. Quinn <kevquinn@gentoo.org> | 2006-12-02 11:33:04 +0000 |
commit | 837f596f09db81bdb04a0f1cbe211cfe9478a818 (patch) | |
tree | 81e8baf0e1b39966689984f6a0afcb514e2dff44 /eclass | |
parent | Version bump; add myself as maintainer. (diff) | |
download | gentoo-2-837f596f09db81bdb04a0f1cbe211cfe9478a818.tar.gz gentoo-2-837f596f09db81bdb04a0f1cbe211cfe9478a818.tar.bz2 gentoo-2-837f596f09db81bdb04a0f1cbe211cfe9478a818.zip |
fix bugs, implement suggestions from vapier
Diffstat (limited to 'eclass')
-rw-r--r-- | eclass/pax-utils.eclass | 161 |
1 files changed, 122 insertions, 39 deletions
diff --git a/eclass/pax-utils.eclass b/eclass/pax-utils.eclass index d04ae8d2ced5..b5ab1506c21c 100644 --- a/eclass/pax-utils.eclass +++ b/eclass/pax-utils.eclass @@ -1,60 +1,123 @@ # Copyright 1999-2006 Gentoo Foundation # Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2 -# $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/eclass/pax-utils.eclass,v 1.3 2006/11/24 15:11:55 kevquinn Exp $ +# $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/eclass/pax-utils.eclass,v 1.4 2006/12/02 11:33:04 kevquinn Exp $ # Author: # Kevin F. Quinn <kevquinn@gentoo.org> # # This eclass provides support for manipulating PaX markings on ELF -# binaries, wrapping the use of the chpax and paxctl utilities. +# binaries, wrapping the use of the chpaxi, paxctl and scanelf utilities. +# Currently it decides which to use depending on what is installed on the +# build host; this may change in the future to use a control variable +# (which would also mean modifying DEPEND to bring in sys-apps/paxctl etc). +# +# +# CONTROL +# ------- +# +# To control what markings are set, assign PAX_MARKINGS in +# /etc/make.conf to contain the strings "EI" and/or "PT". +# If EI is present in PAX_MARKINGS (and the chpax utility +# is present), the legacy 'chpax' style markings will be +# set. If PT is present in PAX_MARKINGS (and the paxctl +# utility is present), the 'paxctl' markings will be set. +# Default is to try to do both. Set it to "NONE" to prevent +# any markings being made. +# +# +# PROVIDED FUNCTIONS +# ------------------ +# +#### pax-mark <flags> {<ELF files>} +# Marks files <files> with provided PaX flags <flags> +# +# Please confirm any relaxation of restrictions with the +# Gentoo Hardened team; either ask on the gentoo-hardened +# mailing list, or CC/assign hardened@g.o on a bug. +# +# Flags are passed directly to the utilities unchanged. Possible +# flags at the time of writing, taken from /sbin/paxctl, are: +# +# p: disable PAGEEXEC P: enable PAGEEXEC +# e: disable EMUTRMAP E: enable EMUTRMAP +# m: disable MPROTECT M: enable MPROTECT +# r: disable RANDMMAP R: enable RANDMMAP +# s: disable SEGMEXEC S: enable SEGMEXEC +# +# Default flags are 'PeMRS', which are the most restrictive +# settings. Refer to http://pax.grsecurity.net/ for details +# on what these flags are all about. There is an obsolete +# flag 'x'/'X' which has been removed from PaX. +# +# If chpax is not installed, the legacy EI flags (which are +# not strip-safe, and strictly speaking violate the ELF spec) +# will not be set. If paxctl is not installed, it falls back +# to scanelf. scanelf is always present, but currently doesn't +# quite do all that paxctl can do. +# Returns fail if one or more files could not be marked. +# +# +#### list-paxables {<files>} +# Prints to stdout all of <files> that are suitable to having PaX +# flags (i.e. filter to just ELF files). Useful for passing wild-card +# lists of files to pax-mark, although in general it is preferable +# for ebuilds to list precisely which executables are to be marked. +# Use like: +# pax-mark -m $(list-paxables ${S}/{,usr/}bin/*) +# +# +#### host-is-pax +# Returns true if the host has a PaX-enabled kernel, false otherwise. +# Intended for use where the build process must be modified conditionally +# in order to satisfy PaX. Note; it is _not_ intended to indicate +# whether the final executables should satisfy PaX - executables should +# always be marked appropriately even if they're only going to be +# installed on a non-PaX system. inherit eutils -##### pax-mark #### -# Mark a file for PaX, with the provided flags, and log it into -# a PaX database. Returns non-zero if flag marking failed. -# -# If paxctl is installed, but not chpax, then the legacy -# EI flags (which are not strip-safe) will not be set. -# If neither are installed, falls back to scanelf (which -# is always present, but currently doesn't quite do all -# that paxctl can do). -_pax_list_files() { - local m cmd - m=$1 ; shift - for f in $*; do - ${cmd} " ${f}" - done -} +# Default to both EI and PT markings. +PAX_MARKINGS=${PAX_MARKINGS:="EI PT"} +# pax-mark <flags> {<ELF files>} pax-mark() { local f flags fail=0 failures="" + # Ignore '-' characters - in particular so that it doesn't matter if + # the caller prefixes with - flags=${1//-} shift - if [[ -x /sbin/chpax ]]; then + # Try chpax, for (deprecated) EI legacy marking. + if type -p chpax > /dev/null && hasq EI ${PAX_MARKINGS}; then einfo "Legacy EI PaX marking -${flags}" - _pax_list_files echo $* - for f in $*; do - /sbin/chpax -${flags} ${f} && continue + _pax_list_files echo "$@" + for f in "$@"; do + /sbin/chpax -${flags} "${f}" && continue fail=1 failures="${failures} ${f}" done fi - if [[ -x /sbin/paxctl ]]; then + # Try paxctl, then scanelf - paxctl takes precedence + # over scanelf. + if type -p paxctl > /dev/null && hasq PT ${PAX_MARKINGS}; then + # Try paxctl, the upstream supported tool. einfo "PT PaX marking -${flags}" - _pax_list_files echo $* - for f in $*; do - /sbin/paxctl -q${flags} ${f} && continue - /sbin/paxctl -qc${flags} ${f} && continue - /sbin/paxctl -qC${flags} ${f} && continue + _pax_list_files echo "$@" + for f in "$@"; do + /sbin/paxctl -q${flags} "${f}" && continue + /sbin/paxctl -qc${flags} "${f}" && continue + /sbin/paxctl -qC${flags} "${f}" && continue fail=1 failures="${failures} ${f}" done - elif [[ -x /usr/bin/scanelf ]]; then + elif type -p scanelf > /dev/null && [[ -n ${PAX_MARKINGS} ]]; then + # Try scanelf, Gentoo's swiss-army knife ELF utility + # Currently this sets EI and PT if it can, no option to + # control what it does. einfo "Fallback PaX marking -${flags}" - _pax_list_files echo $* - /usr/bin/scanelf -Xxz ${flags} $* + _pax_list_files echo "$@" + /usr/bin/scanelf -Xxz ${flags} "$@" else + # Out of options! failures="$*" fail=1 fi @@ -66,13 +129,33 @@ pax-mark() { return ${fail} } -##### host-is-pax -# Indicates whether the build machine has PaX or not; intended for use -# where the build process must be modified conditionally in order to satisfy PaX. +# list-paxables {<files>} +list-paxables() { + file "$@" 2> /dev/null | grep ELF | sed -e 's/: .*$//' +} + +# host-is-pax +# Note: if procfs is not on /proc, this returns False (e.g. Gentoo/FBSD). host-is-pax() { - # We need procfs to work this out. PaX is only available on Linux, - # so result is always false on non-linux machines (e.g. Gentoo/*BSD) - [[ -e /proc/self/status ]] || return 1 - grep ^PaX: /proc/self/status > /dev/null - return $? + grep -qs ^PaX: /proc/self/status +} + + +# INTERNAL FUNCTIONS +# ------------------ +# +# These functions are for use internally by the eclass - do not use +# them elsewhere as they are not supported (i.e. they may be removed +# or their function may change arbitratily). + +# Display a list of things, one per line, indented a bit, using the +# display command in $1. +_pax_list_files() { + local f cmd + cmd=$1 + shift + for f in "$@"; do + ${cmd} " ${f}" + done } + |