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This way, users don't have to check those features using an external
program, or wait for later failure when trying to enroll using an
unsupported feature.
E.g.:
```
# systemd-cryptenroll --fido2-device list
PATH MANUFACTURER PRODUCT RK CLIENTPIN UP UV
/dev/hidraw2 Yubico YubiKey OTP+FIDO+CCID yes no yes no
```
This introduces a new unit condition check: that matches if a specific
kmod module is allowed. This should be generally useful, but there's one
usecase in particular: we can optimize modprobe@.service with this and
avoid forking out a bunch of modprobe requests during boot for the same
kmods.
Checking if a kernel module is loaded is more complicated than just
checking if /sys/module/$MODULE/ exists, since kernel modules typically
take a while to initialize and we must check that this is complete (by
checking if the sysfs attr "initstate" is "live").
Document the fact that read-only properties may not have the flag
SD_BUS_VTABLE_UNPRIVILEGED as that is not obvious especially given the
flag is accepted for writable properties.
Based on the check in `add_object_vtable_internal` called by
`sd_bus_add_object_vtable` (as of the current tip of the main branch
f7f5ba0192):
case _SD_BUS_VTABLE_PROPERTY: {
[...]
if ([...] ||
[...]
(v->flags & SD_BUS_VTABLE_UNPRIVILEGED && v->type == _SD_BUS_VTABLE_PROPERTY)) {
r = -EINVAL;
goto fail;
}
(where `_SD_BUS_VTABLE_PROPERTY` means read-only property whereas
`_SD_BUS_VTABLE_WRITABLE_PROPERTY` maps to writable property).
This was implemented in the commit
adacb9575a ("bus: introduce "trusted" bus
concept and encode access control in object vtables") where
`SD_BUS_VTABLE_UNPRIVILEGED` was introduced:
Writable properties are also subject to SD_BUS_VTABLE_UNPRIVILEGED
and SD_BUS_VTABLE_CAPABILITY() for controlling write access to them.
Note however that read access is unrestricted, as PropertiesChanged
messages might send out the values anyway as an unrestricted
broadcast.
This PR allows an option for systemd exec units to enable UTS namespaces
but not restrict changing hostname via seccomp. Thus, units can change
hostname without affecting the host. This is useful for OS-like
containers running as units where they should have freedom to change
their container hostname if they want, but not the host's hostname.
Fixes: #30348
RestrictNamespaces= would accept "time" but would not actually apply
seccomp filters e.g. systemd-run -p RestrictNamespaces=time unshare -T true
should fail but it succeeded.
This commit actually enables time namespace seccomp filtering.
We'd silently skip devices which don't have the feature in the list.
This looked wrong esp. if no devices were suitable. Instead, list them
and show which ones are usable.
$ build/systemd-cryptenroll --fido2-device=list
PATH MANUFACTURER PRODUCT HMAC SECRET
/dev/hidraw7 Yubico YubiKey OTP+FIDO+CCID ✓
/dev/hidraw10 Yubico Security Key by Yubico ✗
/dev/hidraw5 Yubico Security Key by Yubico ✗
/dev/hidraw9 Yubico Yubikey 4 OTP+U2F+CCID ✗
This allows an option for systemd exec units to enable UTS namespaces
but not restrict changing hostname via seccomp. Thus, units can change
hostname without affecting the host.
Fixes: #30348
Migrating ProtectHostname to enum will set the stage for adding more
properties like ProtectHostname=private in future commits.
In addition, we add PrivateHostnameEx property to dbus API which uses
string instead of boolean.
Some ambiguity (e.g., same-named man pages in multiple volumes)
makes it impossible to fully automate this, but the following
Python snippet (run inside the man/ directory of the systemd repo)
helped to generate the sed command lines (which were subsequently
manually reviewed, run and the false positives reverted):
from pathlib import Path
import lxml
from lxml import etree as ET
man2vol: dict[str, str] = {}
man2citerefs: dict[str, list] = {}
for file in Path(".").glob("*.xml"):
tree = ET.parse(file, lxml.etree.XMLParser(recover=True))
meta = tree.find("refmeta")
if meta is not None:
title = meta.findtext("refentrytitle")
if title is not None:
vol = meta.findtext("manvolnum")
if vol is not None:
man2vol[title] = vol
citerefs = list(tree.iter("citerefentry"))
if citerefs:
man2citerefs[title] = citerefs
for man, refs in man2citerefs.items():
for ref in refs:
title = ref.findtext("refentrytitle")
if title is not None:
has = ref.findtext("manvolnum")
try:
should_have = man2vol[title]
except KeyError: # Non-systemd man page reference? Ignore.
continue
if has != should_have:
print(
f"sed -i '\\|<citerefentry><refentrytitle>{title}"
f"</refentrytitle><manvolnum>{has}</manvolnum>"
f"</citerefentry>|s|<manvolnum>{has}</manvolnum>|"
f"<manvolnum>{should_have}</manvolnum>|' {man}.xml"
)
Let's gather generic key/certificate operations in a new tool
systemd-keyutil instead of spreading them across various special purpose
tools.
Fixes#35087
Let's gather generic key/certificate operations in a new tool
systemd-keyutil instead of spreading them across various special
purpose tools.
Fixes#35087
In the troff output, this doesn't seem to make any difference. But in the
html output, the whitespace is sometimes preserved, creating an additional
gap before the following content. Drop it everywhere to avoid this.
This verb writes a public key to stdout extracted from either a public key
path, from a certificate (path or provider) or from a private key (path,
engine, provider). We'll use this in ukify to get rid of the use of the
python cryptography module to convert a private key or certificate to a
public key.
This allows loading the X.509 certificate from an OpenSSL provider
instead of a file system path. This allows loading certficates directly
from hardware tokens instead of having to export them to a file on
disk first.