Tag: ping

  • Linux Capabilities

    I was recently updating some code that uses fping. Initially it used exec() that was redirected to a temporary file but I changed it to use popen.  While it had been a while since I’ve done this sort of thing, I do recall there was an issue with running popen on setuid binary.  A later found it is mainly around setuid scripts which are very problematic and there are good reasons why you don’t do this.

    Anyhow, the program worked fine which surprised me. Was fping setuid root to get the raw socket?

    $ ls -l /usr/bin/fping
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 31464 May  6 21:42 /usr/bin/fping
    

    It wasn’t which at first all I thought “ok, so that’s why popen is happy”. The way that fping and other programs work is they bind to a raw socket. This socket sits below the normal type sockets such as the ones used for TCP and UDP and normal users cannot use them by default. So how did fping work it’s magic and get access to this socket? It used Capabilities.

     

    Previously getting privileged features had a big problem; it was an all or nothing thing. You want access to a raw socket? Sure, be setuid but that means you also could, for example, read any file on the system or set passwords. Capabilites provide a way of giving programs some better level of access, but not a blank cheque.

    The tool getcap is the way of determining what capabilities are found on a file. These capabilities are attributes on the file which, when the file is run, turn into capabilities or extra permissions. fping has the capability cap_net_raw+ep applied to it. This gives access to the RAW and PACKET sockets which is what fping needs. The +ep after the capability name means it is an Effective and Permitted capability, which describes what happens with child processes and dropping privileges.

    I hadn’t seen these Capabilities before. They are a nice way to give your programs the access they need, but limiting the risk of something going wrong and having a rouge program running as root.