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author | pjd <pjd@FreeBSD.org> | 2007-04-05 21:03:05 +0000 |
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committer | pjd <pjd@FreeBSD.org> | 2007-04-05 21:03:05 +0000 |
commit | 7e73da14eb8410d6878c1e60cdb665d8a8c74c47 (patch) | |
tree | 608077732ab03acb392e93cd02387b0b39403bf6 /usr.bin | |
parent | a4513e9da8410de9807fcc5d2c2387629787ca6d (diff) | |
download | FreeBSD-src-7e73da14eb8410d6878c1e60cdb665d8a8c74c47.zip FreeBSD-src-7e73da14eb8410d6878c1e60cdb665d8a8c74c47.tar.gz |
Add security.jail.mount_allowed sysctl, which allows to mount and
unmount jail-friendly file systems from within a jail.
Precisely it grants PRIV_VFS_MOUNT, PRIV_VFS_UNMOUNT and
PRIV_VFS_MOUNT_NONUSER privileges for a jailed super-user.
It is turned off by default.
A jail-friendly file system is a file system which driver registers
itself with VFCF_JAIL flag via VFS_SET(9) API.
The lsvfs(1) command can be used to see which file systems are
jail-friendly ones.
There currently no jail-friendly file systems, ZFS will be the first one.
In the future we may consider marking file systems like nullfs as
jail-friendly.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Diffstat (limited to 'usr.bin')
-rw-r--r-- | usr.bin/lsvfs/lsvfs.c | 5 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/usr.bin/lsvfs/lsvfs.c b/usr.bin/lsvfs/lsvfs.c index 1e486d7..1f23e1c 100644 --- a/usr.bin/lsvfs/lsvfs.c +++ b/usr.bin/lsvfs/lsvfs.c @@ -105,5 +105,10 @@ fmt_flags(int flags) strcat(buf, "unicode"); } + if(flags & VFCF_JAIL) { + if(comma++) strcat(buf, ", "); + strcat(buf, "jail"); + } + return buf; } |