linux/fs/cifs/cifsacl.h

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1 */
/*
*
* Copyright (c) International Business Machines Corp., 2007
* Author(s): Steve French (sfrench@us.ibm.com)
*
*/
#ifndef _CIFSACL_H
#define _CIFSACL_H
#define NUM_AUTHS (6) /* number of authority fields */
#define SID_MAX_SUB_AUTHORITIES (15) /* max number of sub authority fields */
#define READ_BIT 0x4
#define WRITE_BIT 0x2
#define EXEC_BIT 0x1
#define ACL_OWNER_MASK 0700
#define ACL_GROUP_MASK 0070
#define ACL_EVERYONE_MASK 0007
#define UBITSHIFT 6
#define GBITSHIFT 3
#define ACCESS_ALLOWED 0
#define ACCESS_DENIED 1
cifs: Invoke id mapping functions (try #17 repost) rb tree search and insertion routines. A SID which needs to be mapped, is looked up in one of the rb trees depending on whether SID is either owner or group SID. If found in the tree, a (mapped) id from that node is assigned to uid or gid as appropriate. If unmapped, an upcall is attempted to map the SID to an id. If upcall is successful, node is marked as mapped. If upcall fails, node stays marked as unmapped and a mapping is attempted again only after an arbitrary time period has passed. To map a SID, which can be either a Owner SID or a Group SID, key description starts with the string "os" or "gs" followed by SID converted to a string. Without "os" or "gs", cifs.upcall does not know whether SID needs to be mapped to either an uid or a gid. Nodes in rb tree have fields to prevent multiple upcalls for a SID. Searching, adding, and removing nodes is done within global locks. Whenever a node is either found or inserted in a tree, a reference is taken on that node. Shrinker routine prunes a node if it has expired but does not prune an expired node if its refcount is not zero (i.e. sid/id of that node is_being/will_be accessed). Thus a node, if its SID needs to be mapped by making an upcall, can safely stay and its fields accessed without shrinker pruning it. A reference (refcount) is put on the node without holding the spinlock but a reference is get on the node by holding the spinlock. Every time an existing mapped node is accessed or mapping is attempted, its timestamp is updated to prevent it from getting erased or a to prevent multiple unnecessary repeat mapping retries respectively. For now, cifs.upcall is only used to map a SID to an id (uid or gid) but it would be used to obtain an SID for an id. Signed-off-by: Shirish Pargaonkar <shirishpargaonkar@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Steve French <sfrench@us.ibm.com>
2011-04-22 21:09:36 +04:00
#define SIDOWNER 1
#define SIDGROUP 2
/*
* Security Descriptor length containing DACL with 3 ACEs (one each for
* owner, group and world).
*/
#define DEFAULT_SEC_DESC_LEN (sizeof(struct cifs_ntsd) + \
sizeof(struct cifs_acl) + \
(sizeof(struct cifs_ace) * 4))
/*
* Maximum size of a string representation of a SID:
*
* The fields are unsigned values in decimal. So:
*
* u8: max 3 bytes in decimal
* u32: max 10 bytes in decimal
*
* "S-" + 3 bytes for version field + 15 for authority field + NULL terminator
*
* For authority field, max is when all 6 values are non-zero and it must be
* represented in hex. So "-0x" + 12 hex digits.
*
* Add 11 bytes for each subauthority field (10 bytes each + 1 for '-')
*/
#define SID_STRING_BASE_SIZE (2 + 3 + 15 + 1)
#define SID_STRING_SUBAUTH_SIZE (11) /* size of a single subauth string */
cifs: Invoke id mapping functions (try #17 repost) rb tree search and insertion routines. A SID which needs to be mapped, is looked up in one of the rb trees depending on whether SID is either owner or group SID. If found in the tree, a (mapped) id from that node is assigned to uid or gid as appropriate. If unmapped, an upcall is attempted to map the SID to an id. If upcall is successful, node is marked as mapped. If upcall fails, node stays marked as unmapped and a mapping is attempted again only after an arbitrary time period has passed. To map a SID, which can be either a Owner SID or a Group SID, key description starts with the string "os" or "gs" followed by SID converted to a string. Without "os" or "gs", cifs.upcall does not know whether SID needs to be mapped to either an uid or a gid. Nodes in rb tree have fields to prevent multiple upcalls for a SID. Searching, adding, and removing nodes is done within global locks. Whenever a node is either found or inserted in a tree, a reference is taken on that node. Shrinker routine prunes a node if it has expired but does not prune an expired node if its refcount is not zero (i.e. sid/id of that node is_being/will_be accessed). Thus a node, if its SID needs to be mapped by making an upcall, can safely stay and its fields accessed without shrinker pruning it. A reference (refcount) is put on the node without holding the spinlock but a reference is get on the node by holding the spinlock. Every time an existing mapped node is accessed or mapping is attempted, its timestamp is updated to prevent it from getting erased or a to prevent multiple unnecessary repeat mapping retries respectively. For now, cifs.upcall is only used to map a SID to an id (uid or gid) but it would be used to obtain an SID for an id. Signed-off-by: Shirish Pargaonkar <shirishpargaonkar@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Steve French <sfrench@us.ibm.com>
2011-04-22 21:09:36 +04:00
struct cifs_ntsd {
__le16 revision; /* revision level */
__le16 type;
__le32 osidoffset;
__le32 gsidoffset;
__le32 sacloffset;
__le32 dacloffset;
} __attribute__((packed));
struct cifs_sid {
__u8 revision; /* revision level */
__u8 num_subauth;
__u8 authority[NUM_AUTHS];
__le32 sub_auth[SID_MAX_SUB_AUTHORITIES]; /* sub_auth[num_subauth] */
} __attribute__((packed));
/* size of a struct cifs_sid, sans sub_auth array */
#define CIFS_SID_BASE_SIZE (1 + 1 + NUM_AUTHS)
struct cifs_acl {
__le16 revision; /* revision level */
__le16 size;
__le32 num_aces;
} __attribute__((packed));
/* ACE types - see MS-DTYP 2.4.4.1 */
#define ACCESS_ALLOWED_ACE_TYPE 0x00
#define ACCESS_DENIED_ACE_TYPE 0x01
#define SYSTEM_AUDIT_ACE_TYPE 0x02
#define SYSTEM_ALARM_ACE_TYPE 0x03
#define ACCESS_ALLOWED_COMPOUND_ACE_TYPE 0x04
#define ACCESS_ALLOWED_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x05
#define ACCESS_DENIED_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x06
#define SYSTEM_AUDIT_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x07
#define SYSTEM_ALARM_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x08
#define ACCESS_ALLOWED_CALLBACK_ACE_TYPE 0x09
#define ACCESS_DENIED_CALLBACK_ACE_TYPE 0x0A
#define ACCESS_ALLOWED_CALLBACK_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x0B
#define ACCESS_DENIED_CALLBACK_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x0C
#define SYSTEM_AUDIT_CALLBACK_ACE_TYPE 0x0D
#define SYSTEM_ALARM_CALLBACK_ACE_TYPE 0x0E /* Reserved */
#define SYSTEM_AUDIT_CALLBACK_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x0F
#define SYSTEM_ALARM_CALLBACK_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE 0x10 /* reserved */
#define SYSTEM_MANDATORY_LABEL_ACE_TYPE 0x11
#define SYSTEM_RESOURCE_ATTRIBUTE_ACE_TYPE 0x12
#define SYSTEM_SCOPED_POLICY_ID_ACE_TYPE 0x13
/* ACE flags */
#define OBJECT_INHERIT_ACE 0x01
#define CONTAINER_INHERIT_ACE 0x02
#define NO_PROPAGATE_INHERIT_ACE 0x04
#define INHERIT_ONLY_ACE 0x08
#define INHERITED_ACE 0x10
#define SUCCESSFUL_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG 0x40
#define FAILED_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG 0x80
struct cifs_ace {
__u8 type; /* see above and MS-DTYP 2.4.4.1 */
__u8 flags;
__le16 size;
__le32 access_req;
struct cifs_sid sid; /* ie UUID of user or group who gets these perms */
} __attribute__((packed));
/*
* The current SMB3 form of security descriptor is similar to what was used for
* cifs (see above) but some fields are split, and fields in the struct below
* matches names of fields to the spec, MS-DTYP (see sections 2.4.5 and
* 2.4.6). Note that "CamelCase" fields are used in this struct in order to
* match the MS-DTYP and MS-SMB2 specs which define the wire format.
*/
struct smb3_sd {
__u8 Revision; /* revision level, MUST be one */
__u8 Sbz1; /* only meaningful if 'RM' flag set below */
__le16 Control;
__le32 OffsetOwner;
__le32 OffsetGroup;
__le32 OffsetSacl;
__le32 OffsetDacl;
} __packed;
/* Meaning of 'Control' field flags */
#define ACL_CONTROL_SR 0x8000 /* Self relative */
#define ACL_CONTROL_RM 0x4000 /* Resource manager control bits */
#define ACL_CONTROL_PS 0x2000 /* SACL protected from inherits */
#define ACL_CONTROL_PD 0x1000 /* DACL protected from inherits */
#define ACL_CONTROL_SI 0x0800 /* SACL Auto-Inherited */
#define ACL_CONTROL_DI 0x0400 /* DACL Auto-Inherited */
#define ACL_CONTROL_SC 0x0200 /* SACL computed through inheritance */
#define ACL_CONTROL_DC 0x0100 /* DACL computed through inheritence */
#define ACL_CONTROL_SS 0x0080 /* Create server ACL */
#define ACL_CONTROL_DT 0x0040 /* DACL provided by trusted source */
#define ACL_CONTROL_SD 0x0020 /* SACL defaulted */
#define ACL_CONTROL_SP 0x0010 /* SACL is present on object */
#define ACL_CONTROL_DD 0x0008 /* DACL defaulted */
#define ACL_CONTROL_DP 0x0004 /* DACL is present on object */
#define ACL_CONTROL_GD 0x0002 /* Group was defaulted */
#define ACL_CONTROL_OD 0x0001 /* User was defaulted */
/* Meaning of AclRevision flags */
#define ACL_REVISION 0x02 /* See section 2.4.4.1 of MS-DTYP */
#define ACL_REVISION_DS 0x04 /* Additional AceTypes allowed */
struct smb3_acl {
u8 AclRevision; /* revision level */
u8 Sbz1; /* MBZ */
__le16 AclSize;
__le16 AceCount;
__le16 Sbz2; /* MBZ */
} __packed;
/*
* Used to store the special 'NFS SIDs' used to persist the POSIX uid and gid
* See http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh509017(v=ws.10).aspx
*/
struct owner_sid {
u8 Revision;
u8 NumAuth;
u8 Authority[6];
__le32 SubAuthorities[3];
} __packed;
struct owner_group_sids {
struct owner_sid owner;
struct owner_sid group;
} __packed;
/*
* Minimum security identifier can be one for system defined Users
* and Groups such as NULL SID and World or Built-in accounts such
* as Administrator and Guest and consists of
* Revision + Num (Sub)Auths + Authority + Domain (one Subauthority)
*/
#define MIN_SID_LEN (1 + 1 + 6 + 4) /* in bytes */
/*
* Minimum security descriptor can be one without any SACL and DACL and can
* consist of revision, type, and two sids of minimum size for owner and group
*/
#define MIN_SEC_DESC_LEN (sizeof(struct cifs_ntsd) + (2 * MIN_SID_LEN))
#endif /* _CIFSACL_H */