NAME¶
setfsuid - set user identity used for filesystem checks
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/fsuid.h>
int setfsuid(uid_t fsuid);
DESCRIPTION¶
The system call
setfsuid() changes the value of the caller's filesystem
user ID—the user ID that the Linux kernel uses to check for all
accesses to the filesystem. Normally, the value of the filesystem user ID will
shadow the value of the effective user ID. In fact, whenever the effective
user ID is changed, the filesystem user ID will also be changed to the new
value of the effective user ID.
Explicit calls to
setfsuid() and
setfsgid(2) are usually used only
by programs such as the Linux NFS server that need to change what user and
group ID is used for file access without a corresponding change in the real
and effective user and group IDs. A change in the normal user IDs for a
program such as the NFS server is a security hole that can expose it to
unwanted signals. (But see below.)
setfsuid() will succeed only if the caller is the superuser or if
fsuid matches either the caller's real user ID, effective user ID,
saved set-user-ID, or current filesystem user ID.
RETURN VALUE¶
On both success and failure, this call returns the previous filesystem user ID
of the caller.
VERSIONS¶
This system call is present in Linux since version 1.2.
setfsuid() is Linux-specific and should not be used in programs intended
to be portable.
NOTES¶
When glibc determines that the argument is not a valid user ID, it will return
-1 and set
errno to
EINVAL without attempting the system call.
At the time when this system call was introduced, one process could send a
signal to another process with the same effective user ID. This meant that if
a privileged process changed its effective user ID for the purpose of file
permission checking, then it could become vulnerable to receiving signals sent
by another (unprivileged) process with the same user ID. The filesystem user
ID attribute was thus added to allow a process to change its user ID for the
purposes of file permission checking without at the same time becoming
vulnerable to receiving unwanted signals. Since Linux 2.0, signal permission
handling is different (see
kill(2)), with the result that a process
change can change its effective user ID without being vulnerable to receiving
signals from unwanted processes. Thus,
setfsuid() is nowadays unneeded
and should be avoided in new applications (likewise for
setfsgid(2)).
The original Linux
setfsuid() system call supported only 16-bit user IDs.
Subsequently, Linux 2.4 added
setfsuid32() supporting 32-bit IDs. The
glibc
setfsuid() wrapper function transparently deals with the
variation across kernel versions.
BUGS¶
No error indications of any kind are returned to the caller, and the fact that
both successful and unsuccessful calls return the same value makes it
impossible to directly determine whether the call succeeded or failed.
Instead, the caller must resort to looking at the return value from a further
call such as
setfsuid(-1) (which will always fail), in order to
determine if a preceding call to
setfsuid() changed the filesystem user
ID. At the very least,
EPERM should be returned when the call fails
(because the caller lacks the
CAP_SETUID capability).
SEE ALSO¶
kill(2),
setfsgid(2),
capabilities(7),
credentials(7)
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.74 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/.