commit | 48b5ff1c14134999c74d34a6027335e1777bd6fa | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Mattias Nissler <[email protected]> | Thu Oct 11 15:31:41 2018 +0200 |
committer | Treehugger Robot <[email protected]> | Wed Feb 06 12:29:15 2019 +0000 |
tree | b82b679ca9dc85eff4149fa3ba0811153bb9a912 | |
parent | e520019e5e727bae72c78ff7b90fb3081334eada [diff] |
minijail: Untangle redundant SECUREBITS logic The existing code first decides whether to set SECBIT_KEEP_CAPS individually via PR_SET_KEEPCAPS, then updates it again via PR_SET_SECUREBITS. This change untangles that logic into a single function. Bug: None TEST=Builds and passes tests. Change-Id: I78bb0d78ade8deabffdaddf71f01edce67b222bb
The Minijail homepage and main repo is https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/minijail/.
There might be other copies floating around, but this is the official one!
Minijail is a sandboxing and containment tool used in Chrome OS and Android. It provides an executable that can be used to launch and sandbox other programs, and a library that can be used by code to sandbox itself.
You're one git clone
away from happiness.
$ git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/minijail $ cd minijail
Releases are tagged as linux-vXX
: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/minijail/+refs
See the HACKING.md document for more details.
See the RELEASE.md document for more details.
We've got a couple of contact points.
The following talk serves as a good introduction to Minijail and how it can be used.
The Chromium OS project has a comprehensive sandboxing document that is largely based on Minijail.
After you play with the simple examples below, you should check that out.
# id uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root),128(pkcs11) # minijail0 -u jorgelo -g 5000 /usr/bin/id uid=72178(jorgelo) gid=5000(eng) groups=5000(eng)
# minijail0 -u jorgelo -c 3000 -- /bin/cat /proc/self/status Name: cat ... CapInh: 0000000000003000 CapPrm: 0000000000003000 CapEff: 0000000000003000 CapBnd: 0000000000003000