[linux-cifs-client] [PATCH 2/3] cifs: tighten up default file_mode/dir_mode

Jeff Layton jlayton at redhat.com
Sun May 24 22:45:16 GMT 2009


The current default file mode is 02767 and dir mode is 0777. This is
extremely "loose". Given that CIFS is a single-user protocol, these
permissions allow anyone to use the mount -- in effect, giving anyone on
the machine access to the credentials used to mount the share.

Change this by making the default permissions restrict access to only
the uid of the share.

Note that this patch also removes the mandatory locking flags from the
default file_mode. After having looked at how these flags are used by
the kernel, I don't think that keeping them as the default offers any
real benefit. That flag combination makes it so that the kernel enforces
mandatory locking.

Since the server is going to do that for us anyway, I don't think we
want the client to enforce this by default on applications that just
want advisory locks. Anyone that does want this behavior can always
enable it by setting the file_mode appropriately.

Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton at redhat.com>
---
 fs/cifs/connect.c |    6 +++---
 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/fs/cifs/connect.c b/fs/cifs/connect.c
index 4f5a03c..c8f4cc2 100644
--- a/fs/cifs/connect.c
+++ b/fs/cifs/connect.c
@@ -827,9 +827,9 @@ cifs_parse_mount_options(char *options, const char *devname,
 	vol->target_rfc1001_name[0] = 0;
 	vol->linux_uid = current_uid();  /* use current_euid() instead? */
 	vol->linux_gid = current_gid();
-	vol->dir_mode = S_IRWXUGO;
-	/* 2767 perms indicate mandatory locking support */
-	vol->file_mode = (S_IRWXUGO | S_ISGID) & (~S_IXGRP);
+
+	/* default to only allowing access to owner of the mount */
+	vol->dir_mode = vol->file_mode = S_IRWXU;
 
 	/* vol->retry default is 0 (i.e. "soft" limited retry not hard retry) */
 	vol->rw = true;
-- 
1.6.0.6



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