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authorEric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>2018-07-20 15:59:17 -0500
committerEric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>2018-09-16 16:06:21 +0200
commita8ebd17160ce364fac6647f223991a8f2f1924b9 (patch)
treeb60f5d1aa56620c7e5414ca71f404beb351c1683 /kernel/pid_namespace.c
parent0ab93e9c99f8208c0a1a7b7170c827936268c996 (diff)
tty_io: Use group_send_sig_info in __do_SACK to note it is a session being killed
Replace send_sig and force_sig in __do_SAK with group_send_sig_info the general helper for sending a signal to a process group. This is wordier but it allows specifying PIDTYPE_SID so that the signal code knows the signal went to a session. Both force_sig() and send_sig(..., 1) specify SEND_SIG_PRIV and the new call of group_send_sig_info does that explicitly. This is enough to ensure even a pid namespace init is killed. The global init remains unkillable. The guarantee that __do_SAK tries to provide is a clean path to login to a machine. As the global init is unkillable, if it chooses to hold open a tty it can violate this guarantee. A technique other than killing processes would be needed to provide this guarantee to userspace. The only difference between force_sig and send_sig when sending SIGKILL is that SIGNAL_UNKILLABLE is cleared. This has no affect on the processing of a signal sent with SEND_SIG_PRIV by any process, making it unnecessary, and not behavior that needs to be preserved. force_sig was used originally because it did not take as many locks as send_sig. Today send_sig, force_sig and group_send_sig_info take the same locks when delivering a signal. group_send_sig_info also contains a permission check that force_sig and send_sig do not. However the presence of SEND_SIG_PRIV makes the permission check a noop. So the permission check does not result in any behavioral differences. Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/pid_namespace.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions