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authorEric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>2006-03-31 14:31:33 +0400
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@g5.osdl.org>2006-04-01 00:18:59 +0400
commit390e2ff07712468ce6600a43aa91e897b056ce12 (patch)
treefb92d3c2218fa3e41078d1b5e103892ac7e95117 /kernel/sys.c
parent9741ef964dc8bfeb6520825df9fed8f538c3336e (diff)
downloadlinux-390e2ff07712468ce6600a43aa91e897b056ce12.tar.xz
[PATCH] Make setsid() more robust
The core problem: setsid fails if it is called by init. The effect in 2.6.16 and the earlier kernels that have this problem is that if you do a "ps -j 1 or ps -ej 1" you will see that init and several of it's children have process group and session == 0. Instead of process group == session == 1. Despite init calling setsid. The reason it fails is that daemonize calls set_special_pids(1,1) on kernel threads that are launched before /sbin/init is called. The only remaining effect in that current->signal->leader == 0 for init instead of 1. And the setsid call fails. No one has noticed because /sbin/init does not check the return value of setsid. In 2.4 where we don't have the pidhash table, and daemonize doesn't exist setsid actually works for init. I care a lot about pid == 1 not being a special case that we leave broken, because of the container/jail work that I am doing. - Carefully allow init (pid == 1) to call setsid despite the kernel using its session. - Use find_task_by_pid instead of find_pid because find_pid taking a pidtype is going away. Signed-off-by: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/sys.c')
-rw-r--r--kernel/sys.c19
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/sys.c b/kernel/sys.c
index 7ef7f6054c28..0b6ec0e7936f 100644
--- a/kernel/sys.c
+++ b/kernel/sys.c
@@ -1372,18 +1372,29 @@ asmlinkage long sys_getsid(pid_t pid)
asmlinkage long sys_setsid(void)
{
struct task_struct *group_leader = current->group_leader;
- struct pid *pid;
+ pid_t session;
int err = -EPERM;
mutex_lock(&tty_mutex);
write_lock_irq(&tasklist_lock);
- pid = find_pid(PIDTYPE_PGID, group_leader->pid);
- if (pid)
+ /* Fail if I am already a session leader */
+ if (group_leader->signal->leader)
+ goto out;
+
+ session = group_leader->pid;
+ /* Fail if a process group id already exists that equals the
+ * proposed session id.
+ *
+ * Don't check if session id == 1 because kernel threads use this
+ * session id and so the check will always fail and make it so
+ * init cannot successfully call setsid.
+ */
+ if (session > 1 && find_task_by_pid_type(PIDTYPE_PGID, session))
goto out;
group_leader->signal->leader = 1;
- __set_special_pids(group_leader->pid, group_leader->pid);
+ __set_special_pids(session, session);
group_leader->signal->tty = NULL;
group_leader->signal->tty_old_pgrp = 0;
err = process_group(group_leader);