On Tue, 2003-10-28 at 22:47, Steve Kemp wrote: > On Tue, Oct 28, 2003 at 09:43:07PM +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote: > > > Audio applications or applets (ie. executable files) requiring realtime > > privileges should be installed as follows: > > - user = root > > - group = audio > > - permissions > > - SUID root > > - have a debconf question asking to allow/ deny this > > - [debconf question "importance level"??] > > - user = read, write, execute > > - group = read, execute > > - other = read only > > Why read only for other? Given that they can't execute what is > presumably a compiled binary I'd treat them as untrusted and not allow > them to read it at all. > > So: > > user : rwx > group: rx > other:
By my reading of policy, the idea with read access for other is that by removing read capability, all we are doing is forcing them to go download/ extract the package manually, which is simply an inconvenience, not an increase or decrease of security. Thus, read access might as well be granted. > > Anyone, how does Andreas' comment "We _do_ have an audio-group and users > > who need to have access to /dev/{mixer,snd,dsp,..} should be put in > > there, instead of making the app SGID." apply here - ie. am I confused > > about the use of SUID? > > I think that the SGID would be fine if it were just a matter of > reading/writing audio devices. However in the case of tools that need > realtime priority you'll need SUID to do this. If you're SUID already > then being SGID(audio) is redundent. Ahh - this might be the core of the two concepts being mixed (by my lack of understanding) - I believe that jackd doesn't necessarily talk to any audio device, it is simply about scheduling priority. Thus jackstart the wrapper. So perhaps our "generic suid/ capability wrapper" would be: - jack the wrapper, or jtw of course, then we'd have to come up with an expansion/ meaning of "jack" outside of the audio domain (JACK - A Capability Killer ? :) I think I'm understanding the two concepts here as 1) audio device access - require user to have audio group privs 2) realtime scheduling requirements - use capabilities, ala jackstart (But this requires a custom kernel ???) ta zen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]