On 10 February 2014 17:07, James Gritton <ja...@freebsd.org> wrote: > On 2/5/2014 12:05 PM, John Baldwin wrote: > >> I think having a "kmem" flag for jails is a hack and not the right >> approach. >> It does make a jail useless security-wise, but by masquerading as a flag, >> it >> implies that it is only partially violating security which gives a false >> sense >> of security. >> >> A short term solution that would permit non-security jails without having >> to >> do the longer term work that Robert would like might be to add a new >> per-jail >> flag that in effect means "no security at all". You would then modify one >> place (prison_priv_check() in kern_jail.c) to treat a jail with this flag >> set >> as if it wasn't jailed at all. This would clearly communicate to a user >> what >> they were doing by enabling this flag (jail --root-me-please), and it >> would >> also avoid future proliferation of new flags to add more optional and >> obscure >> holes in jails. > > So is it worthwhile to add a new jail parameter called "insecure" (or > somesuch)? That way you could easily add the encapsulation without > any of the security. The other vibe I'm getting is not to do > anything. Either way, it sounds like the Xorg-enabling patch will > remain a patch - not seeing a lot of buy-in here. > > I'm not against more optional and obscure holes if they have a use; I > just call that "a fine-grained capabilities model."
I'd rather it stay a patch. IMHO the only viable solution is to create a sandboxable API for this DRI/IO-MMU stuff to, well, DRI via. So hm. Can you actually run clients in different jails, but have them access the same DRI window(s)? Or does running a client in a jail force it to go all over the socket(s) and not via DRI? -a _______________________________________________ svn-src-all@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/svn-src-all To unsubscribe, send any mail to "svn-src-all-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"