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SETPRIV(1) |
User Commands |
SETPRIV(1) |
setpriv - run a program with different Linux privilege settings
setpriv [options] program [arguments]
Sets or queries various Linux privilege settings that are inherited across
execve(2).
- -d, --dump
- Dumps current privilege state. Specify more than once to show extra,
mostly useless, information. Incompatible with all other options.
- --no-new-privs
- Sets the no_new_privs bit. With this bit set, execve(2) will
not grant new privileges. For example, the setuid and setgid bits as well
as file capabilities will be disabled. (Executing binaries with these bits
set will still work, but they will not gain privilege. Certain LSMs,
especially AppArmor, may result in failures to execute certain programs.)
This bit is inherited by child processes and cannot be unset. See
prctl(2) and Documentation/prctl/no_new_privs.txt in the
Linux kernel source.
- The no_new_privs bit is supported since Linux 3.5.
- --inh-caps (+|-)cap,... or --bounding-set
(+|-)cap,...
- Sets inheritable capabilities or capability bounding set. See
capabilities(7). The argument is a comma-separated list of
+cap and -cap entries, which add or remove an entry
respectively. +all and -all can be used to add or remove all
caps. The set of capabilities starts out as the current inheritable set
for --inh-caps and the current bounding set for
--bounding-set. If you drop something from the bounding set without
also dropping it from the inheritable set, you are likely to become
confused. Do not do that.
- --list-caps
- Lists all known capabilities. Must be specified alone.
- --ruid uid, --euid uid, --reuid
uid
- Sets the real, effective, or both uids.
- Setting uid or gid does not change capabilities, although
the exec call at the end might change capabilities. This means that, if
you are root, you probably want to do something like:
- --reuid=1000 --regid=1000 --caps=-all
- --rgid gid, --egid gid, --regid
gid
- Sets the real, effective, or both gids.
- For safety, you must specify one of --keep-groups, --clear-groups, or
--groups if you set any primary gid.
- --clear-groups
- Clears supplementary groups.
- --keep-groups
- Preserves supplementary groups. Only useful in conjunction with --rgid,
--egid, or --regid.
- --groups group,...
- Sets supplementary groups.
- --securebits (+|-)securebit,...
- Sets or clears securebits. The valid securebits are noroot,
noroot_locked, no_setuid_fixup,
no_setuid_fixup_locked, and keep_caps_locked.
keep_caps is cleared by execve(2) and is therefore not
allowed.
- --selinux-label label
- Requests a particular SELinux transition (using a transition on exec, not
dyntrans). This will fail and cause setpriv(1) to abort if SELinux
is not in use, and the transition may be ignored or cause execve(2)
to fail at SELinux's whim. (In particular, this is unlikely to work in
conjunction with no_new_privs.) This is similar to
runcon(1).
- --apparmor-profile profile
- Requests a particular AppArmor profile (using a transition on exec). This
will fail and cause setpriv(1) to abort if AppArmor is not in use,
and the transition may be ignored or cause execve(2) to fail at
AppArmor's whim.
- -V, --version
- Display version information and exit.
- -h, --help
- Display help and exit.
If applying any specified option fails, program will not be run and
setpriv will return with exit code 127.
Be careful with this tool -- it may have unexpected security
consequences. For example, setting no_new_privs and then execing a program
that is SELinux-confined (as this tool would do) may prevent the SELinux
restrictions from taking effect.
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