> On Mon, Aug 01, 2005 at 11:37:05PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> Howdy hackers, >> >> I'm sorry for the previous patch, so here is at least one item that >> really >> bugs me that isn't obfuscation. In short, I don't see any reason to fork >> some process to simply "touch" a file (is a filesystem writable) when >> built-in shell i/o does this: >> >> --- /etc/rc.d/tmp.orig Mon Aug 1 23:20:24 2005 >> +++ /etc/rc.d/tmp Mon Aug 1 23:22:07 2005 >> @@ -48,8 +48,8 @@ >> [Nn][Oo]) >> ;; >> *) >> - if (/bin/mkdir -p /tmp/.diskless 2> /dev/null); then >> - rmdir /tmp/.diskless >> + if ( > /tmp/.diskless 2> /dev/null); then >> + rm /tmp/.diskless >> else >> if [ -h /tmp ]; then >> echo "*** /tmp is a symlink to a non-writable >> area!" >> > > The thing you suggest is bloody insecure. Just imagine some baduser > doing ln -s /etc/passwd /tmp/.diskless before rc.d/tmp gets executed. > I guess this is the reason why directory creation is used instead of > file creation.
Well these notions have nothing todo with the way it works, but they are interesting still. I would imagine a dir could be linked too if somebody managed to insert a rc.d script in that was ordered sufficiently early enough to do the evil tasks you are thinking about. Even if mktemp(1) were available at this stage, I wouldn't use it here. > > I just wonder why a new shell is forked for this test. Simply > if /bin/mkdir -p /tmp/.diskless 2> /dev/null ; then > would do the same thing without forking a new shell that only executes > /bin/mkdir Let me be clear about this, the ONLY reason mkdir is used here is because touch is under /usr somewhere which isn't even mounted at this point (assuming /usr is mounted seperatly, as is the case on nfs diskless systems). So we are left with what is availabile in /bin, /sbin, /rescue. Therefore mkdir was used as a work-around. What I'm saying is this entire thought process is overly-engineered when the shell can simply "touch" a file with stdout or stderr. This is indeed the most minor of optimizations. > > Even we can use > if [ -d /tmp -a -w /tmp ] ; then > or (which is equivalent) > if [ -d /tmp ] && [ -w /tmp ] ; then > and save external commands (mkdir) execution and directory > creation/deletion at all. > _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"