xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/capsicum.4 (revision a6d8be451f62d425b71a4874f7d4e133b9fb393c)
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27.Dd January 3, 2024
28.Dt CAPSICUM 4
29.Os
30.Sh NAME
31.Nm Capsicum
32.Nd lightweight OS capability and sandbox framework
33.Sh SYNOPSIS
34.Cd "options CAPABILITY_MODE"
35.Cd "options CAPABILITIES"
36.Sh DESCRIPTION
37.Nm
38is a lightweight OS capability and sandbox framework implementing a hybrid
39capability system model.
40Capabilities are unforgeable tokens of authority that can be delegated and must
41be presented to perform an action.
42.Nm
43makes file descriptors into capabilities.
44.Pp
45.Nm
46can be used for application and library compartmentalisation, the
47decomposition of larger bodies of software into isolated (sandboxed)
48components in order to implement security policies and limit the impact of
49software vulnerabilities.
50.Pp
51.Nm
52provides two core kernel primitives:
53.Bl -tag -width indent
54.It capability mode
55A process mode, entered by invoking
56.Xr cap_enter 2 ,
57in which access to global OS namespaces (such as the file system and PID
58namespaces) is restricted; only explicitly delegated rights, referenced by
59memory mappings or file descriptors, may be used.
60Once set, the flag is inherited by future children processes, and may not be
61cleared.
62.It capabilities
63Limit operations that can be called on file descriptors.
64For example, a file descriptor returned by
65.Xr open 2
66may be refined using
67.Xr cap_rights_limit 2
68so that only
69.Xr read 2
70and
71.Xr write 2
72can be called, but not
73.Xr fchmod 2 .
74The complete list of the capability rights can be found in the
75.Xr rights 4
76manual page.
77.El
78.Pp
79In some cases,
80.Nm
81requires use of alternatives to traditional POSIX APIs in order to name
82objects using capabilities rather than global namespaces:
83.Bl -tag -width indent
84.It process descriptors
85File descriptors representing processes, allowing parent processes to manage
86child processes without requiring access to the PID namespace; described in
87greater detail in
88.Xr procdesc 4 .
89.It anonymous shared memory
90An extension to the POSIX shared memory API to support anonymous swap objects
91associated with file descriptors; described in greater detail in
92.Xr shm_open 2 .
93.El
94.Pp
95In some cases,
96.Nm
97limits the valid values of some parameters to traditional APIs in order to
98restrict access to global namespaces:
99.Bl -tag -width indent
100.It process IDs
101Processes can only act upon their own process ID with syscalls such as
102.Xr cpuset_setaffinity 2 .
103.El
104.Sh SEE ALSO
105.Xr cap_enter 2 ,
106.Xr cap_fcntls_limit 2 ,
107.Xr cap_getmode 2 ,
108.Xr cap_ioctls_limit 2 ,
109.Xr cap_rights_limit 2 ,
110.Xr fchmod 2 ,
111.Xr open 2 ,
112.Xr pdfork 2 ,
113.Xr pdgetpid 2 ,
114.Xr pdkill 2 ,
115.Xr pdwait4 2 ,
116.Xr read 2 ,
117.Xr shm_open 2 ,
118.Xr write 2 ,
119.Xr cap_rights_get 3 ,
120.Xr capsicum_helpers 3 ,
121.Xr libcasper 3 ,
122.Xr procdesc 4
123.Sh HISTORY
124.Nm
125first appeared in
126.Fx 9.0 ,
127and was developed at the University of Cambridge.
128.Sh AUTHORS
129.Nm
130was developed by
131.An -nosplit
132.An Robert Watson Aq Mt rwatson@FreeBSD.org
133and
134.An Jonathan Anderson Aq Mt jonathan@FreeBSD.org
135at the University of Cambridge, and
136.An Ben Laurie Aq Mt benl@FreeBSD.org
137and
138.An Kris Kennaway Aq Mt kris@FreeBSD.org
139at Google, Inc., and
140.An Pawel Jakub Dawidek Aq Mt pawel@dawidek.net .
141