CAPABILITIES(7) manual page
Table of Contents
capabilities - overview
of Linux capabilities
For the purpose of performing permission
checks, traditional UNIX implementations distinguish two categories of
processes: privileged processes (whose effective user ID is 0, referred
to as superuser or root), and unprivileged processes (whose effective UID
is nonzero). Privileged processes bypass all kernel permission checks, while
unprivileged processes are subject to full permission checking based on
the process’s credentials (usually: effective UID, effective GID, and supplementary
group list).
Starting with kernel 2.2, Linux divides the privileges traditionally
associated with superuser into distinct units, known as capabilities, which
can be independently enabled and disabled. Capabilities are a per-thread
attribute.
The following list shows the capabilities implemented
on Linux, and the operations or behaviors that each capability permits:
- CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL (since Linux 2.6.11)
- Enable and disable kernel auditing;
change auditing filter rules; retrieve auditing status and filtering rules.
- CAP_AUDIT_READ (since Linux 3.16)
- Allow reading the audit log via a multicast
netlink socket.
- CAP_AUDIT_WRITE (since Linux 2.6.11)
- Write records to kernel
auditing log.
- CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND (since Linux 3.5)
- Employ features that can
block system suspend (epoll(7)
EPOLLWAKEUP, /proc/sys/wake_lock).
- CAP_CHOWN
- Make arbitrary changes to file UIDs and GIDs (see chown(2)
).
- CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE
- Bypass file read, write, and execute permission checks. (DAC is an abbreviation
of "discretionary access control".)
- CAP_DAC_READ_SEARCH
-
- *
- Bypass file read
permission checks and directory read and execute permission checks;
- *
- Invoke
open_by_handle_at(2)
.
- CAP_FOWNER
-
- *
- Bypass permission checks on operations
that normally require the filesystem UID of the process to match the UID
of the file (e.g., chmod(2)
, utime(2)
), excluding those operations covered
by CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE and CAP_DAC_READ_SEARCH;
- *
- set extended file attributes
(see chattr(1)
) on arbitrary files;
- *
- set Access Control Lists (ACLs) on
arbitrary files;
- *
- ignore directory sticky bit on file deletion;
- *
- specify
O_NOATIME for arbitrary files in open(2)
and fcntl(2)
.
- CAP_FSETID
- Don’t
clear set-user-ID and set-group-ID permission bits when a file is modified;
set the set-group-ID bit for a file whose GID does not match the filesystem
or any of the supplementary GIDs of the calling process.
- CAP_IPC_LOCK
-
Lock memory (mlock(2)
, mlockall(2)
, mmap(2)
, shmctl(2)
).
- CAP_IPC_OWNER
- Bypass
permission checks for operations on System V IPC objects.
- CAP_KILL
- Bypass
permission checks for sending signals (see kill(2)
). This includes use of
the ioctl(2)
KDSIGACCEPT operation.
- CAP_LEASE (since Linux 2.4)
- Establish
leases on arbitrary files (see fcntl(2)
).
- CAP_LINUX_IMMUTABLE
- Set the FS_APPEND_FL
and FS_IMMUTABLE_FL inode flags (see chattr(1)
).
- CAP_MAC_ADMIN (since Linux
2.6.25)
- Override Mandatory Access Control (MAC). Implemented for the Smack
Linux Security Module (LSM).
- CAP_MAC_OVERRIDE (since Linux 2.6.25)
- Allow MAC
configuration or state changes. Implemented for the Smack LSM.
- CAP_MKNOD
(since Linux 2.4)
- Create special files using mknod(2)
.
- CAP_NET_ADMIN
- Perform
various network-related operations:
- *
- interface configuration;
- *
- administration
of IP firewall, masquerading, and accounting;
- *
- modify routing tables;
- *
- bind
to any address for transparent proxying;
- *
- set type-of-service (TOS)
- *
- clear
driver statistics;
- *
- set promiscuous mode;
- *
- enabling multicasting;
- *
- use
setsockopt(2)
to set the following socket options: SO_DEBUG, SO_MARK, SO_PRIORITY
(for a priority outside the range 0 to 6), SO_RCVBUFFORCE, and SO_SNDBUFFORCE.
- CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE
- Bind a socket to Internet domain privileged ports
(port numbers less than 1024).
- CAP_NET_BROADCAST
- (Unused) Make socket broadcasts,
and listen to multicasts.
- CAP_NET_RAW
-
- *
- use RAW and PACKET sockets;
- *
- bind
to any address for transparent proxying.
- CAP_SETGID
- Make arbitrary manipulations
of process GIDs and supplementary GID list; forge GID when passing socket
credentials via UNIX domain sockets; write a group ID mapping in a user
namespace (see user_namespaces(7)
).
- CAP_SETFCAP (since Linux 2.6.24)
- Set file
capabilities.
- CAP_SETPCAP
- If file capabilities are not supported: grant
or remove any capability in the caller’s permitted capability set to or
from any other process. (This property of CAP_SETPCAP is not available when
the kernel is configured to support file capabilities, since CAP_SETPCAP
has entirely different semantics for such kernels.)
If file capabilities
are supported: add any capability from the calling thread’s bounding set
to its inheritable set; drop capabilities from the bounding set (via prctl(2)
PR_CAPBSET_DROP); make changes to the securebits flags.
- CAP_SETUID
- Make
arbitrary manipulations of process UIDs (setuid(2)
, setreuid(2)
, setresuid(2)
,
setfsuid(2)
); forge UID when passing socket credentials via UNIX domain
sockets; write a user ID mapping in a user namespace (see user_namespaces(7)
).
- CAP_SYS_ADMIN
-
- *
- Perform a range of system administration operations including:
quotactl(2)
, mount(2)
, umount(2)
, swapon(2)
, swapoff(2)
, sethostname(2)
,
and setdomainname(2)
;
- *
- perform privileged syslog(2)
operations (since Linux
2.6.37, CAP_SYSLOG should be used to permit such operations);
- *
- perform VM86_REQUEST_IRQ
vm86(2)
command;
- *
- perform IPC_SET and IPC_RMID operations on arbitrary
System V IPC objects;
- *
- override RLIMIT_NPROC resource limit;
- *
- perform operations
on trusted and security Extended Attributes (see attr(5)
);
- *
- use lookup_dcookie(2)
;
- *
- use ioprio_set(2)
to assign IOPRIO_CLASS_RT and (before Linux 2.6.25) IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE
I/O scheduling classes;
- *
- forge PID when passing socket credentials via
UNIX domain sockets;
- *
- exceed /proc/sys/fs/file-max, the system-wide limit
on the number of open files, in system calls that open files (e.g., accept(2)
,
execve(2)
, open(2)
, pipe(2)
);
- *
- employ CLONE_* flags that create new namespaces
with clone(2)
and unshare(2)
(but, since Linux 3.8, creating user namespaces
does not require any capability);
- *
- call perf_event_open(2)
;
- *
- access privileged
perf event information;
- *
- call setns(2)
(requires CAP_SYS_ADMIN in the target
namespace);
- *
- call fanotify_init(2)
;
- *
- perform KEYCTL_CHOWN and KEYCTL_SETPERM
keyctl(2)
operations;
- *
- perform madvise(2)
MADV_HWPOISON operation;
- *
- employ
the TIOCSTI ioctl(2)
to insert characters into the input queue of a terminal
other than the caller’s controlling terminal;
- *
- employ the obsolete nfsservctl(2)
system call;
- *
- employ the obsolete bdflush(2)
system call;
- *
- perform various
privileged block-device ioctl(2)
operations;
- *
- perform various privileged
filesystem ioctl(2)
operations;
- *
- perform administrative operations on many
device drivers.
- CAP_SYS_BOOT
- Use reboot(2)
and kexec_load(2)
.
- CAP_SYS_CHROOT
- Use chroot(2)
.
- CAP_SYS_MODULE
- Load and unload kernel modules (see init_module(2)
and delete_module(2)
); in kernels before 2.6.25: drop capabilities from the
system-wide capability bounding set.
- CAP_SYS_NICE
-
- *
- Raise process nice value
(nice(2)
, setpriority(2)
) and change the nice value for arbitrary processes;
- *
- set real-time scheduling policies for calling process, and set scheduling
policies and priorities for arbitrary processes (sched_setscheduler(2)
,
sched_setparam(2)
, shed_setattr(2)
);
- *
- set CPU affinity for arbitrary processes
(sched_setaffinity(2)
);
- *
- set I/O scheduling class and priority for arbitrary
processes (ioprio_set(2)
);
- *
- apply migrate_pages(2)
to arbitrary processes
and allow processes to be migrated to arbitrary nodes;
- *
- apply move_pages(2)
to arbitrary processes;
- *
- use the MPOL_MF_MOVE_ALL flag with mbind(2)
and
move_pages(2)
.
- CAP_SYS_PACCT
- Use acct(2)
.
- CAP_SYS_PTRACE
-
- *
- Trace arbitrary
processes using ptrace(2)
;
- *
- apply get_robust_list(2)
to arbitrary processes;
- *
- transfer data to or from the memory of arbitrary processes using process_vm_readv(2)
and process_vm_writev(2)
.
- *
- inspect processes using kcmp(2)
.
- CAP_SYS_RAWIO
-
- *
- Perform I/O port operations (iopl(2)
and ioperm(2)
);
- *
- access /proc/kcore;
- *
- employ the FIBMAP ioctl(2)
operation;
- *
- open devices for accessing x86
model-specific registers (MSRs, see msr(4)
)
- *
- update /proc/sys/vm/mmap_min_addr;
- *
- create memory mappings at addresses below the value specified by /proc/sys/vm/mmap_min_addr;
- *
- map files in /proc/bus/pci;
- *
- open /dev/mem and /dev/kmem;
- *
- perform various
SCSI device commands;
- *
- perform certain operations on hpsa(4)
and cciss(4)
devices;
- *
- perform a range of device-specific operations on other devices.
- CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
-
- *
- Use reserved space on ext2 filesystems;
- *
- make ioctl(2)
calls controlling ext3 journaling;
- *
- override disk quota limits;
- *
- increase
resource limits (see setrlimit(2)
);
- *
- override RLIMIT_NPROC resource limit;
- *
- override maximum number of consoles on console allocation;
- *
- override maximum
number of keymaps;
- *
- allow more than 64hz interrupts from the real-time clock;
- *
- raise msg_qbytes limit for a System V message queue above the limit in
/proc/sys/kernel/msgmnb (see msgop(2)
and msgctl(2)
);
- *
- override the /proc/sys/fs/pipe-size-max
limit when setting the capacity of a pipe using the F_SETPIPE_SZ fcntl(2)
command.
- *
- use F_SETPIPE_SZ to increase the capacity of a pipe above the
limit specified by /proc/sys/fs/pipe-max-size;
- *
- override /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/queues_max
limit when creating POSIX message queues (see mq_overview(7)
);
- *
- employ
prctl(2)
PR_SET_MM operation;
- *
- set /proc/PID/oom_score_adj to a value lower
than the value last set by a process with CAP_SYS_RESOURCE.
- CAP_SYS_TIME
- Set system clock (settimeofday(2)
, stime(2)
, adjtimex(2)
); set real-time
(hardware) clock.
- CAP_SYS_TTY_CONFIG
- Use vhangup(2)
; employ various privileged
ioctl(2)
operations on virtual terminals.
- CAP_SYSLOG (since Linux 2.6.37)
- *
- Perform privileged syslog(2)
operations. See syslog(2)
for information
on which operations require privilege.
- *
- View kernel addresses exposed via
/proc and other interfaces when /proc/sys/kernel/kptr_restrict has the
value 1. (See the discussion of the kptr_restrict in proc(5)
.)
- CAP_WAKE_ALARM
(since Linux 3.0)
- Trigger something that will wake up the system (set CLOCK_REALTIME_ALARM
and CLOCK_BOOTTIME_ALARM timers).
A full
implementation of capabilities requires that:
- 1.
- For all privileged operations,
the kernel must check whether the thread has the required capability in
its effective set.
- 2.
- The kernel must provide system calls allowing a thread’s
capability sets to be changed and retrieved.
- 3.
- The filesystem must support
attaching capabilities to an executable file, so that a process gains those
capabilities when the file is executed.
Before kernel 2.6.24, only the first
two of these requirements are met; since kernel 2.6.24, all three requirements
are met.
Each thread has three capability sets containing
zero or more of the above capabilities:
- Permitted:
- This is a limiting superset
for the effective capabilities that the thread may assume. It is also a
limiting superset for the capabilities that may be added to the inheritable
set by a thread that does not have the CAP_SETPCAP capability in its effective
set.
If a thread drops a capability from its permitted set, it can never
reacquire that capability (unless it execve(2)
s either a set-user-ID-root
program, or a program whose associated file capabilities grant that capability).
- Inheritable:
- This is a set of capabilities preserved across an execve(2)
.
It provides a mechanism for a process to assign capabilities to the permitted
set of the new program during an execve(2)
.
- Effective:
- This is the set of
capabilities used by the kernel to perform permission checks for the thread.
A child created via fork(2)
inherits copies of its parent’s capability sets.
See below for a discussion of the treatment of capabilities during execve(2)
.
Using capset(2)
, a thread may manipulate its own capability sets (see below).
Since Linux 3.2, the file /proc/sys/kernel/cap_last_cap exposes the numerical
value of the highest capability supported by the running kernel; this can
be used to determine the highest bit that may be set in a capability set.
Since kernel 2.6.24, the kernel supports associating capability
sets with an executable file using setcap(8)
. The file capability sets are
stored in an extended attribute (see setxattr(2)
) named security.capability.
Writing to this extended attribute requires the CAP_SETFCAP capability.
The file capability sets, in conjunction with the capability sets of the
thread, determine the capabilities of a thread after an execve(2)
.
The
three file capability sets are:
- Permitted (formerly known as forced):
- These
capabilities are automatically permitted to the thread, regardless of the
thread’s inheritable capabilities.
- Inheritable (formerly known as allowed):
- This set is ANDed with the thread’s inheritable set to determine which inheritable
capabilities are enabled in the permitted set of the thread after the execve(2)
.
- Effective:
- This is not a set, but rather just a single bit. If this bit
is set, then during an execve(2)
all of the new permitted capabilities
for the thread are also raised in the effective set. If this bit is not
set, then after an execve(2)
, none of the new permitted capabilities is
in the new effective set.
Enabling the file effective capability bit implies
that any file permitted or inheritable capability that causes a thread
to acquire the corresponding permitted capability during an execve(2)
(see
the transformation rules described below) will also acquire that capability
in its effective set. Therefore, when assigning capabilities to a file (setcap(8)
,
cap_set_file(3)
, cap_set_fd(3)
), if we specify the effective flag as being
enabled for any capability, then the effective flag must also be specified
as enabled for all other capabilities for which the corresponding permitted
or inheritable flags is enabled.
During an execve(2)
, the kernel calculates the new capabilities
of the process using the following algorithm:
P’(permitted) = (P(inheritable) & F(inheritable)) |
(F(permitted) & cap_bset)
P’(effective) = F(effective) ? P’(permitted) : 0
P’(inheritable) = P(inheritable) [i.e., unchanged]
where:
- P
- denotes the value of a thread capability set before the execve(2)
- P’
- denotes the value of a capability set after the execve(2)
- F
- denotes a file
capability set
- cap_bset
- is the value of the capability bounding set (described
below).
In order to provide
an all-powerful root using capability sets, during an execve(2)
:
- 1.
- If a set-user-ID-root
program is being executed, or the real user ID of the process is 0 (root)
then the file inheritable and permitted sets are defined to be all ones
(i.e., all capabilities enabled).
- 2.
- If a set-user-ID-root program is being executed,
then the file effective bit is defined to be one (enabled).
The upshot of
the above rules, combined with the capabilities transformations described
above, is that when a process execve(2)
s a set-user-ID-root program, or when
a process with an effective UID of 0 execve(2)
s a program, it gains all
capabilities in its permitted and effective capability sets, except those
masked out by the capability bounding set. This provides semantics that
are the same as those provided by traditional UNIX systems.
The capability bounding set is a security mechanism that can be used
to limit the capabilities that can be gained during an execve(2)
. The bounding
set is used in the following ways:
- *
- During an execve(2)
, the capability
bounding set is ANDed with the file permitted capability set, and the result
of this operation is assigned to the thread’s permitted capability set. The
capability bounding set thus places a limit on the permitted capabilities
that may be granted by an executable file.
- *
- (Since Linux 2.6.25) The capability
bounding set acts as a limiting superset for the capabilities that a thread
can add to its inheritable set using capset(2)
. This means that if a capability
is not in the bounding set, then a thread can’t add this capability to its
inheritable set, even if it was in its permitted capabilities, and thereby
cannot have this capability preserved in its permitted set when it execve(2)
s
a file that has the capability in its inheritable set.
Note that the bounding
set masks the file permitted capabilities, but not the inherited capabilities.
If a thread maintains a capability in its inherited set that is not in
its bounding set, then it can still gain that capability in its permitted
set by executing a file that has the capability in its inherited set.
Depending
on the kernel version, the capability bounding set is either a system-wide
attribute, or a per-process attribute.
Capability bounding set prior to Linux
2.6.25
In kernels before 2.6.25, the capability bounding set is a system-wide
attribute that affects all threads on the system. The bounding set is accessible
via the file /proc/sys/kernel/cap-bound. (Confusingly, this bit mask parameter
is expressed as a signed decimal number in /proc/sys/kernel/cap-bound.)
Only the init process may set capabilities in the capability bounding set;
other than that, the superuser (more precisely: programs with the CAP_SYS_MODULE
capability) may only clear capabilities from this set.
On a standard system
the capability bounding set always masks out the CAP_SETPCAP capability.
To remove this restriction (dangerous!), modify the definition of CAP_INIT_EFF_SET
in include/linux/capability.h and rebuild the kernel.
The system-wide capability
bounding set feature was added to Linux starting with kernel version 2.2.11.
Capability bounding set from Linux 2.6.25 onward
From Linux 2.6.25, the capability
bounding set is a per-thread attribute. (There is no longer a system-wide
capability bounding set.)
The bounding set is inherited at fork(2)
from
the thread’s parent, and is preserved across an execve(2)
.
A thread may
remove capabilities from its capability bounding set using the prctl(2)
PR_CAPBSET_DROP operation, provided it has the CAP_SETPCAP capability. Once
a capability has been dropped from the bounding set, it cannot be restored
to that set. A thread can determine if a capability is in its bounding set
using the prctl(2)
PR_CAPBSET_READ operation.
Removing capabilities from
the bounding set is supported only if file capabilities are compiled into
the kernel. In kernels before Linux 2.6.33, file capabilities were an optional
feature configurable via the CONFIG_SECURITY_FILE_CAPABILITIES option. Since
Linux 2.6.33, the configuration option has been removed and file capabilities
are always part of the kernel. When file capabilities are compiled into
the kernel, the init process (the ancestor of all processes) begins with
a full bounding set. If file capabilities are not compiled into the kernel,
then init begins with a full bounding set minus CAP_SETPCAP, because this
capability has a different meaning when there are no file capabilities.
Removing a capability from the bounding set does not remove it from the
thread’s inherited set. However it does prevent the capability from being
added back into the thread’s inherited set in the future.
To preserve the traditional semantics for transitions
between 0 and nonzero user IDs, the kernel makes the following changes
to a thread’s capability sets on changes to the thread’s real, effective,
saved set, and filesystem user IDs (using setuid(2)
, setresuid(2)
, or similar):
- 1.
- If one or more of the real, effective or saved set user IDs was previously
0, and as a result of the UID changes all of these IDs have a nonzero value,
then all capabilities are cleared from the permitted and effective capability
sets.
- 2.
- If the effective user ID is changed from 0 to nonzero, then all capabilities
are cleared from the effective set.
- 3.
- If the effective user ID is changed
from nonzero to 0, then the permitted set is copied to the effective set.
- 4.
- If the filesystem user ID is changed from 0 to nonzero (see setfsuid(2)
),
then the following capabilities are cleared from the effective set: CAP_CHOWN,
CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE, CAP_DAC_READ_SEARCH, CAP_FOWNER, CAP_FSETID, CAP_LINUX_IMMUTABLE
(since Linux 2.6.30), CAP_MAC_OVERRIDE, and CAP_MKNOD (since Linux 2.6.30).
If the filesystem UID is changed from nonzero to 0, then any of these capabilities
that are enabled in the permitted set are enabled in the effective set.
If a thread that has a 0 value for one or more of its user IDs wants to
prevent its permitted capability set being cleared when it resets all of
its user IDs to nonzero values, it can do so using the prctl(2)
PR_SET_KEEPCAPS
operation.
A thread can retrieve
and change its capability sets using the capget(2)
and capset(2)
system
calls. However, the use of cap_get_proc(3)
and cap_set_proc(3)
, both provided
in the libcap package, is preferred for this purpose. The following rules
govern changes to the thread capability sets:
- 1.
- If the caller does not have
the CAP_SETPCAP capability, the new inheritable set must be a subset of
the combination of the existing inheritable and permitted sets.
- 2.
- (Since
Linux 2.6.25) The new inheritable set must be a subset of the combination
of the existing inheritable set and the capability bounding set.
- 3.
- The new
permitted set must be a subset of the existing permitted set (i.e., it is
not possible to acquire permitted capabilities that the thread does not
currently have).
- 4.
- The new effective set must be a subset of the new permitted
set.
Starting with kernel 2.6.26, and with a kernel in which file capabilities
are enabled, Linux implements a set of per-thread securebits flags that
can be used to disable special handling of capabilities for UID 0 (root).
These flags are as follows:
- SECBIT_KEEP_CAPS
- Setting this flag allows a
thread that has one or more 0 UIDs to retain its capabilities when it switches
all of its UIDs to a nonzero value. If this flag is not set, then such a
UID switch causes the thread to lose all capabilities. This flag is always
cleared on an execve(2)
. (This flag provides the same functionality as the
older prctl(2)
PR_SET_KEEPCAPS operation.)
- SECBIT_NO_SETUID_FIXUP
- Setting
this flag stops the kernel from adjusting capability sets when the threads’s
effective and filesystem UIDs are switched between zero and nonzero values.
(See the subsection Effect of User ID Changes on Capabilities.)
- SECBIT_NOROOT
- If this bit is set, then the kernel does not grant capabilities when a
set-user-ID-root program is executed, or when a process with an effective
or real UID of 0 calls execve(2)
. (See the subsection Capabilities and execution
of programs by root.)
Each of the above "base" flags has a companion "locked"
flag. Setting any of the "locked" flags is irreversible, and has the effect
of preventing further changes to the corresponding "base" flag. The locked
flags are: SECBIT_KEEP_CAPS_LOCKED, SECBIT_NO_SETUID_FIXUP_LOCKED, and
SECBIT_NOROOT_LOCKED.
The securebits flags can be modified and retrieved
using the prctl(2)
PR_SET_SECUREBITS and PR_GET_SECUREBITS operations. The
CAP_SETPCAP capability is required to modify the flags.
The securebits
flags are inherited by child processes. During an execve(2)
, all of the
flags are preserved, except SECBIT_KEEP_CAPS which is always cleared.
An
application can use the following call to lock itself, and all of its descendants,
into an environment where the only way of gaining capabilities is by executing
a program with associated file capabilities:
prctl(PR_SET_SECUREBITS,
SECBIT_KEEP_CAPS_LOCKED |
SECBIT_NO_SETUID_FIXUP |
SECBIT_NO_SETUID_FIXUP_LOCKED |
SECBIT_NOROOT |
SECBIT_NOROOT_LOCKED);
For a discussion of the interaction of
capabilities and user namespaces, see user_namespaces(7)
.
No
standards govern capabilities, but the Linux capability implementation
is based on the withdrawn POSIX.1e draft standard; see
Since kernel
2.5.27, capabilities are an optional kernel component, and can be enabled/disabled
via the CONFIG_SECURITY_CAPABILITIES kernel configuration option.
The /proc/PID/task/TID/status
file can be used to view the capability sets of a thread. The /proc/PID/status
file shows the capability sets of a process’s main thread. Before Linux 3.8,
nonexistent capabilities were shown as being enabled (1)
in these sets.
Since Linux 3.8, all nonexistent capabilities (above CAP_LAST_CAP) are
shown as disabled (0).
The libcap package provides a suite of routines
for setting and getting capabilities that is more comfortable and less
likely to change than the interface provided by capset(2)
and capget(2)
.
This package also provides the setcap(8)
and getcap(8)
programs. It can
be found at
Before kernel 2.6.24, and since kernel 2.6.24 if file capabilities are not
enabled, a thread with the CAP_SETPCAP capability can manipulate the capabilities
of threads other than itself. However, this is only theoretically possible,
since no thread ever has CAP_SETPCAP in either of these cases:
- *
- In the
pre-2.6.25 implementation the system-wide capability bounding set, /proc/sys/kernel/cap-bound,
always masks out this capability, and this can not be changed without modifying
the kernel source and rebuilding.
- *
- If file capabilities are disabled in
the current implementation, then init starts out with this capability removed
from its per-process bounding set, and that bounding set is inherited by
all other processes created on the system.
capsh(1)
, capget(2)
,
prctl(2)
, setfsuid(2)
, cap_clear(3)
, cap_copy_ext(3)
, cap_from_text(3)
,
cap_get_file(3)
, cap_get_proc(3)
, cap_init(3)
, capgetp(3)
, capsetp(3)
,
libcap(3)
, credentials(7)
, user_namespaces(7)
, pthreads(7)
, getcap(8)
,
setcap(8)
include/linux/capability.h in the Linux kernel source tree
This
page is part of release 3.78 of the Linux man-pages project. A description
of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version
of this page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Table of Contents