History log of /freebsd/usr.sbin/rtsold/cap_sendmsg.c (Results 1 – 2 of 2)
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Revision tags: release/14.0.0
# b3e76948 16-Aug-2023 Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org>

Remove $FreeBSD$: two-line .h pattern

Remove /^\s*\*\n \*\s+\$FreeBSD\$$\n/


Revision tags: release/13.2.0, release/12.4.0, release/13.1.0, release/12.3.0, release/13.0.0, release/12.2.0, release/11.4.0, release/12.1.0, release/11.3.0
# 04e9edb5 05-Jan-2019 Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>

Capsicumize rtsol(8) and rtsold(8).

These programs parse ND6 Router Advertisement messages; rtsold(8) has
required an SA, SA-14:20.rtsold, for a bug in this code. Thus, they
are good candidates for

Capsicumize rtsol(8) and rtsold(8).

These programs parse ND6 Router Advertisement messages; rtsold(8) has
required an SA, SA-14:20.rtsold, for a bug in this code. Thus, they
are good candidates for sandboxing.

The approach taken is to run the main executable in capability mode
and use Casper services to provide functionality that cannot be
implemented within the sandbox. In particular, several custom services
were required.

- A Casper service is used to send Router Solicitation messages on a
raw ICMP6 socket. Initially I took the approach of creating a
socket for each interface upon startup, and connect(2)ing it to
the all-routers multicast group for the interface. This permits
the use of sendmsg(2) in capability mode, but only works if the
interface's link is up when rtsol(d) starts. So, instead, the
rtsold.sendmsg service is used to transmit RS messages on behalf
of the main process. One could alternately define a service
which simply creates and connects a socket for each destination
address, and returns the socket to the sandboxed process. However,
to implement rtsold's -m option we also need to read the ND6 default
router list, and this cannot be done in capability mode.
- rtsold may execute resolvconf(8) in response to RDNSS and DNSSL
options in received RA messages. A Casper service is used to
fork and exec resolvconf(8), and to reap the child process.
- A service is used to determine whether a given interface's
link-local address is useable (i.e., not duplicated or undergoing
DAD). This information is supplied by getifaddrs(3), which reads
a sysctl not available in capability mode. The SIOCGIFCONF socket
ioctl provides equivalent information and can be used in capability
mode, but I decided against it for now because of some limitations
of that interface.

In addition to these new services, cap_syslog(3) is used to send
messages to syslogd.

Reviewed by: oshogbo
Tested by: bz (previous versions)
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17572

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