tech-kern archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]
Re: Capsicum: practical capabilities for UNIX
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 07:28:56PM -0500, David Young wrote:
> The chief difference I see between a process limited by Capsicum and
> a process limited by Systrace is that the Capsicum-limited process
> has only the privileges that the parent process grants it, while the
> Systrace-limited process has a system-call firewall applied. It's
> easier with the Capsicum-limited process than with the Systrace-limited
> process to reason about what the process can do, and to adjust the
> process privileges, because it's easier to name and count capabilities
> than to read, interpret, and re-write systrace rules.
Does this mean that every program that wants to use Capsicum needs to be
patched to use Capsicum? This is the main problem I have with MACs and
related frameworks; to gain full advantage from these, you need the
resources of Red Hat. Are we going to patch third-party software to use
Capsicum? Who knows what should be allowed or disallowed in a monster like
Firefox? Apache? X.org? Bind? Who would be maintaining these patches?
- Jukka.
Home |
Main Index |
Thread Index |
Old Index